Abstract
The nature of dark matter is one of the fundamental questions in physics
today.
A number of experiments have recently claimed to detect dark matter
interactions,
via both direct and indirect experimental methods, although none are yet
independently confirmed. The DEAP/CLEAN collaboration is developing a
single-phase liquid argon detector, instrumented with photomultiplier tubes
to
observe scintillation light from dark matter scatters in the detector. This
design
strategy emphasizes scalability to target masses of order 10 tons or more.
This
talk will review recent results, describe the experimental technique and
status
of DEAP/CLEAN, and discuss strategies for conclusively identifying a signal
in
direct dark matter detection searches.