868,060 research outputs found

    Gamma-Ray Burst Afterglow: Polarization and Analytic Light Curves

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    GRB afterglow polarization is discussed. We find an observable, up to 10%, polarization, if the magnetic field coherence length grows at about the speed of light after the field is generated at the shock front. Detection of a polarized afterglow would show that collisionless ultrarelativistic shocks can generate strong large scale magnetic fields and confirm the synchrotron afterglow model. Non-detection, at a 1% level, would imply that either the synchrotron emission model is incorrect, or that strong magnetic fields, after they are generated in the shock, somehow manage to stay un-dissipated at ``microscopic'', skin depth, scales. Analytic lightcurves of synchrotron emission from an ultrarelativistic self-similar blast wave are obtained for an arbitrary electron distribution function, taking into account the effects of synchrotron cooling. The peak synchrotron flux and the flux at frequencies much smaller than the peak frequency are insensitive to the details of the electron distribution function; hence their observational determination would provide strong constraints on blast wave parameters.Comment: 19 pages, submitted to Ap

    Statistics of Dark Matter Halos from Gravitational Lensing

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    We present a new approach to measure the mass function of dark matter halos and to discriminate models with differing values of Omega through weak gravitational lensing. We measure the distribution of peaks from simulated lensing surveys and show that the lensing signal due to dark matter halos can be detected for a wide range of peak heights. Even when the signal-to-noise is well below the limit for detection of individual halos, projected halo statistics can be constrained for halo masses spanning galactic to cluster halos. The use of peak statistics relies on an analytical model of the noise due to the intrinsic ellipticities of source galaxies. The noise model has been shown to accurately describe simulated data for a variety of input ellipticity distributions. We show that the measured peak distribution has distinct signatures of gravitational lensing, and its non-Gaussian shape can be used to distinguish models with different values of Omega. The use of peak statistics is complementary to the measurement of field statistics, such as the ellipticity correlation function, and possibly not susceptible to the same systematic errors.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, matches version accepted for ApJ

    Explaining the DAMPE data with scalar dark matter and gauged U(1)Le−LμU(1)_{L_e-L_\mu} interaction

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    Inspired by the peak structure observed by recent DAMPE experiment in e+e−e^+e^- cosmic-ray spectrum, we consider a scalar dark matter (DM) model with gauged U(1)Le−LμU(1)_{L_e-L_\mu} symmetry, which is the most economical anomaly-free theory to potentially explain the peak by DM annihilation in nearby subhalo. We utilize the process χχ→Z′Z′→llˉl′lˉ′\chi \chi \to Z^\prime Z^\prime \to l \bar{l} l^\prime \bar{l}^\prime, where χ\chi, Z′Z^\prime, l(′)l^{(\prime)} denote the scalar DM, the new gauge boson and l(′)=e,μl^{(\prime)} =e, \mu, respectively, to generate the e+e−e^+e^- spectrum. By fitting the predicted spectrum to the experimental data, we obtain the favored DM mass range mχ≃3060−100+80 GeVm_\chi \simeq 3060^{+80}_{-100} \, {\rm GeV} and Δm≡mχ−mZ′≲14 GeV\Delta m \equiv m_\chi - m_{Z^\prime} \lesssim 14 \, {\rm GeV} at 68%68\% Confidence Level (C.L.). Furthermore, we determine the parameter space of the model which can explain the peak and meanwhile satisfy the constraints from DM relic abundance, DM direct detection and the collider bounds. We conclude that the model we consider can account for the peak, although there exists a tension with the constraints from the LEP-II bound on mZ′m_{Z^\prime} arising from the cross section measurement of e+e−→Z′∗→e+e−e^+e^- \to Z^{\prime\ast} \to e^+ e^-.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figure

    Graviton Spectra in String Cosmology

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    We propose to uncover the signature of a stringy era in the primordial Universe by searching for a prominent peak in the relic graviton spectrum. This feature, which in our specific model terminates an ω3\omega^3 increase and initiates an ω−7\omega^{-7} decrease, is induced during the so far overlooked bounce of the scale factor between the collapsing deflationary era (or pre-Big Bang) and the expanding inflationary era (or post-Big Bang). We evaluate both analytically and numerically the frequency and the intensity of the peak and we show that they may likely fall in the realm of the new generation of interferometric detectors. The existence of a peak is at variance with ordinarily monotonic (either increasing or decreasing) graviton spectra of canonical cosmologies; its detection would therefore offer strong support to string cosmology.Comment: 14 pages, RevTex source and 6 figures.p
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