82 research outputs found

    WIMPless dark matter and the excess gamma rays from the Galactic center

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    In this paper we discuss the excess gamma rays from the Galactic center, the WMAP haze and the CoGeNT and DAMA results in WIMPless models. At the same time we also investigate the low energy constraints from the anomalous magnetic moment of leptons and from some lepton flavor violating decays. It is found that, for scalar or vector WIMPless dark matter, neither the WMAP haze nor the CoGeNT and DAMA observations could be explained simultaneously with the excess gamma rays from the Galactic center. As to fermion WIMPless dark matter, it is only marginally possible to accommodate the CoGeNT and DAMA results with the excess gamma rays from the Galactic center with vector connector fields. On the other hand, only scalar connector fields could interpret the WMAP haze concerning the constraints of anomalous magnetic moment of leptons. Furthermore, if there is only one connector field for all the charged leptons, some lepton flavor violating decays could happen with too large branching ratios severely violating the experimental bounds.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.

    A Model Independent Method to Study Dark Matter induced Leptons and Gamma rays

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    By using recent data, we directly determine the dark matter (DM) induced e±e^\pm spectrum at the source from experimental measurements at the earth, without reference to specific particle physics models. The DM induced gamma rays emitted via inverse Compton scattering are then obtained in a model independent way. However the results depend on the choice of the astrophysical e±e^\pm background, which is not reliably known. Nevertheless, we calculate, as an illustration, the fluxes of gamma rays from the Fornax cluster in the decaying DM scenario with various astrophysical e±e^\pm backgrounds. Without any assumptions on details of the DM model, the predictions turn out to be either in disagreement with or only marginally below the upper limits measured recently by the Fermi-LAT Collaboration. In addition, these DM induced ICS gamma rays in the GeV range are shown to be almost independent of choices of cosmic ray propagation model and of DM density profile, when a given astrophysical e±e^\pm background is assumed. This provides a strong constraint on decaying DM scenario as the gamma rays may be produced in other processes besides inverse Compton scattering, such as the bremsstrahlung and neutral pion decays.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, Latex, to match the published versio

    A Revisit to Top Quark Forward-Backward Asymmetry

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    We analyze various models for the top quark forward-backward asymmetry (AFBtA^t_{FB}) at the Tevatron, using the latest CDF measurements on different AFBtA^t_{FB}s and the total cross section. The axigluon model in Ref. \cite{paul} has difficulties in explaining the large rapidity dependent asymmetry and mass dependent asymmetry simultaneously and the parameter space relevant to AFBtA^t_{FB} is ruled out by the latest dijet search at ATLAS. In contrast to Ref. \cite{cp}, we demonstrate that the large parameter space in this model with a U(1)dU(1)_d flavor symemtry is not ruled out by flavor physics. The tt-channel flavor-violating ZZ^{\prime} \cite{hitoshi}, WW^{\prime}\cite{waiyee} and diquark \cite{tim} models all have parameter regions that satisfy different AFBA_{FB} measurements within 1 σ\sigma. However, the heavy ZZ^{\prime} model which can be marginally consistent with the total cross section is severely constrained by the Tevatron direct search of same-sign top quark pair. The diquark model suffers from too large total cross section and is difficult to fit the ttˉt \bar{t} invariant mass distribution. The electroweak precision constraints on the WW' model based on ZZ'-ZZ mixings is estimated and the result is rather weak (mZ>450m_{Z'} > 450 GeV). Therefore, the heavy WW^{\prime} model seems to give the best fit for all the measurements. The WW^{\prime} model predicts the ttˉ+jt\bar{t}+j signal from tWtW^{\prime} production and is 10%-50% of SM ttˉt\bar{t} at the 7 TeV LHC. Such t+jt+j resonance can serve as the direct test of the WW^{\prime} model.Comment: 25 pages, 7 figures, 1 tabl

    Gamma-rays from Nearby Clusters: Constraints on Selected Decaying Dark Matter Models

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    Recently, the Fermi-LAT collaboration reported upper limits on the GeV gamma-ray flux from nearby clusters of galaxies. Motivated by these limits, we study corresponding constraints on gamma-ray emissions from two specific decaying dark matter models, one via grand unification scale suppressed operators and the other via R-parity violating operators. Both can account for the PAMELA and Fermi-LAT excesses of e^\pm. For GUT decaying dark matter, the gamma-rays from the M49 and Fornax clusters, with energy in the range of 1 to 10 GeV, lead to the most stringent constraints to date. As a result, this dark matter is disfavored with conventional model of e^\pm background. In addition, it is likely that some tension exists between the Fermi-LAT e^\pm excess and the gamma ray constraints for any decaying dark matter model, provided conventional model of e^\pm background is adopted. Nevertheless, the GUT decaying dark matter can still solely account for the PAMELA positron fraction excess without violating the gamma-ray constraints. For the gravitino dark matter model with R-parity violation, cluster observations do not give tight constraints. This is because a different e^\pm background has been adopted which leads to relatively light dark matter mass around 200 GeV.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures, version to appear in Phys. Lett.

    Unitarity Constraints on effective interaction in πN\pi N scattering

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    Positivity constraints are derived on pion-nucleon scattering amplitudes and their even-order derivatives inside the Mandelstam Triangle with the help of dispersion relations. Fairly interesting constraints are obtained on some of the low energy constants, by a combination of the chiral perturbation theory for heavy baryons and existing fitting results from available pion-nucleon phase shifts at intermediate energies.Comment: version to appear in Phys. Lett. B. 6 page
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