988 research outputs found
Highest Energy Cosmic Rays
We review the current state and future prospect of ultra high energy cosmic
ray physics and the relationship between cosmic rays and gamma-ray
astrophysics.Comment: 12 pages, in the proceedings of the Gamma 2004 Symposium on
High-Energy Gamma-Ray Astronomy, Heidelberg, July, 2004 (AIP Proceedings
Series
Converting neutron stars into strange stars
If strange matter is formed in the interior of a neutron star, it will convert the entire neutron star into a strange star. The proposed mechanisms are reviewed for strange matter seeding and the possible strange matter contamination of neutron star progenitors. The conversion process that follows seeding and the recent calculations of the conversion timescale are discussed
Gamma-Ray Constraints on Neutralino Dark Matter Clumps in the Galactic Halo
According to high resolution cold dark matter (CDM) simulations, large
virialized halos are formed through the constant merging of smaller halos
formed at earlier times. In particular, the halo of our Galaxy may have
hundreds of dark matter clumps. The annihilation of dark matter particles such
as the neutralino in these clumps generates -ray fluxes that can
potentially be detected by future experiments such as GLAST. We find that,
depending on the parameters of the clump density profile and on the
distribution of clumps in the Galactic halo, the contribution to the diffuse
-ray background from clumps can constrain the properties of neutralinos
such as the mass and annihilation cross section. We model the density profile
of clumps by three representative dark matter profiles: singular isothermal
spheres (SIS), Moore profiles, and Navarro, Frenk and White (NFW) density
profiles and calculate the spectrum and angular distribution in the sky of the
-ray flux due to neutralino annihilation in the clumpy halo of the
Galaxy. The calculations are carried out in the context of two different
scenarios for the distribution of clumps in the Galaxy and their
concentrations, which result in very different conclusions.Comment: 24 pages, 7 ps fig
Super Heavy Dark Matter in light of BICEP2, Planck and Ultra High Energy Cosmic Rays Observations
The announcement by BICEP2 of the detection of B-mode polarization consistent
with primordial gravitational waves with a tensor-to-scalar ratio,
, challenged predictions from most inflationary models
of a lower value for . More recent results by Planck on polarized dust
emission show that the observed tensor modes signal is compatible with pure
foreground emission. A more significant constraint on was then obtained by
a joint analysis of Planck, BICEP2 and Keck Array data showing an upper limit
to the tensor to scalar ratio , excluding the case with low
statistical significance. Forthcoming measurements by BICEP3, the Keck Array,
and other CMB polarization experiments, open the possibility for making the
fundamental measurement of . Here we discuss how sets the scale for
models where the dark matter is created at the inflationary epoch, the
generically called super-heavy dark matter models. We also consider the
constraints on such scenarios given by recent data from ultrahigh energy cosmic
ray observatories which set the limit on super-heavy dark matter particles
lifetime. We discuss how super-heavy dark matter can be discovered by a precise
measurement of combined with future observations of ultra high energy
cosmic rays.Comment: 17 pages, 14 eps figures, accepted for publication in JCA
Messengers of the Extreme Universe
We give a brief overview of the highest energy messengers: very high energy
photons, neutrinos, and ultra-high energy cosmic rays. The mysterious workings
of the extreme universe should soon be unveil with new observatories now under
construction.Comment: 11 pages, 1 fig., Proceedings of the XXI Texas Symposium, Florence,
Italy December 200
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