Abstract
The puzzle of what constitutes Dark Matter is arguably one of the most
pressing issues in contemporary physics. Given the increasing number of
null-results in attempts to find Dark Matter candidates at very high
energy scales, a paradigm shift has taken place during the past few
years: A well-motivated DM candidate exists at much smaller masses,
called the axion, and a steep increase of experiments to try to find it
can be seen
In this talk we'll review the axion and review two newer attempts to
unveil it: One using fixed-target beams and one using a direct
detection method with high-frequency RF structures.