In the era of precision cosmology, research often means big science: large observatories, highly complex instruments, international collaborations and substantial funding. Yet even in such an advanced field, progress is still possible—including in the search for elusive dark matter—through more agile approaches, driven by small teams and young researchers, supported by institutions and a good dose of ingenuity.
In a paper titled “A New Limit for Axion Dark Matter with SPACE” published in the Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics, a group of then-undergraduate students from the University of Hamburg built a cavity detector to search for axions—among the most promising candidates for dark matter—and set new experimental limits on their properties.
The result was achieved with relatively limited resources, showing that even small-scale experiments can make a meaningful contribution to one of the most open challenges in modern physics.








