78 research outputs found
Quantum Manifestations of Graphene Edge Stress and Edge Instability: A First-Principles Study
We have performed first-principles calculations of graphene edge stresses,
which display two interesting quantum manifestations absent from the classical
interpretation: the armchair edge stress oscillates with a nanoribbon width,
and the zigzag edge stress is noticeably reduced by spin polarization. Such
quantum stress effects in turn manifest in mechanical edge twisting and warping
instability, showing features not captured by empirical potentials or continuum
theory. Edge adsorption of H and Stone-Wales reconstruction are shown to
provide alternative mechanisms in relieving the edge compression and hence to
stabilize the planar edge structure.Comment: 5figure
Nambu-Goldstone Dark Matter and Cosmic Ray Electron and Positron Excess
We propose a model of dark matter identified with a pseudo-Nambu-Goldstone
boson in the dynamical supersymmetry breaking sector in a gauge mediation
scenario. The dark matter particles annihilate via a below-threshold narrow
resonance into a pair of R-axions each of which subsequently decays into a pair
of light leptons. The Breit-Wigner enhancement explains the excess electron and
positron fluxes reported in the recent cosmic ray experiments PAMELA, ATIC and
PPB-BETS without postulating an overdensity in halo, and the limit on
anti-proton flux from PAMELA is naturally evaded.Comment: 3 figure
Cosmic ray electrons and positrons from discrete stochastic sources
The distances that galactic cosmic ray electrons and positrons can travel are
severely limited by energy losses to at most a few kiloparsec, thereby
rendering the local spectrum very sensitive to the exact distribution of
sources in our galactic neighbourhood. However, due to our ignorance of the
exact source distribution, we can only predict the spectrum stochastically. We
argue that even in the case of a large number of sources the central limit
theorem is not applicable, but that the standard deviation for the flux from a
random source is divergent due to a long power law tail of the probability
density. Instead, we compute the expectation value and characterise the scatter
around it by quantiles of the probability density using a generalised central
limit theorem in a fully analytical way. The uncertainty band is asymmetric
about the expectation value and can become quite large for TeV energies. In
particular, the predicted local spectrum is marginally consistent with the
measurements by Fermi-LAT and HESS even without imposing spectral breaks or
cut-offs at source. We conclude that this uncertainty has to be properly
accounted for when predicting electron fluxes above a few hundred GeV from
astrophysical sources.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures; references and clarifying comment added; to
appear in JCA
Long term treatment with metformin in patients with type 2 diabetes and risk of vitamin B-12 deficiency: randomised placebo controlled trial
Objectives To study the effects of metformin on the incidence of vitamin B-12 deficiency (<150 pmol/l), low concentrations of vitamin B-12 (150-220 pmol/l), and folate and homocysteine concentrations in patients with type 2 diabetes receiving treatment with insulin
R-parity preserving super-WIMP decays
We point out that when the decay of one electroweak scale super-WIMP state to
another occurs at second order in a super-weak coupling constant, this can
naturally lead to decay lifetimes that are much larger than the age of the
Universe, and create observable consequences for the indirect detection of dark
matter. We demonstrate this in a supersymmetric model with Dirac neutrinos,
where the right-handed scalar neutrinos are the lightest and next-to-lightest
supersymmetric partners. We show that this model produces a super-WIMP decay
rate scaling as m_nu^4/(weak scale)^3, and may significantly enhance the
fraction of energetic electrons and positrons over anti-protons in the decay
products. Such a signature is consistent with the observations recently
reported by the PAMELA experiment.Comment: 14 pages, v3 JHEP versio
Fundamental physics in space with the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope
Successfully launched in June 2008, the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope,
formerly named GLAST, has been observing the high-energy gamma-ray sky with
unprecedented sensitivity for more than two years, opening a new window on a
wide variety of exotic astrophysical objects. This paper is a short overview of
the main science highlights, aimed at non-specialists, with emphasis on those
which are more directly connected with the study of fundamental
physics---particularly the search for signals of new physics in the diffuse
gamma-ray emission and in the cosmic radiation and the study of Gamma-Ray Burst
as laboratories for testing possible violations of the Lorentz invariance.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, submitted for the proceedings of DICE 201
PAMELA, DAMA, INTEGRAL and Signatures of Metastable Excited WIMPs
Models of dark matter with ~ GeV scale force mediators provide attractive
explanations of many high energy anomalies, including PAMELA, ATIC, and the
WMAP haze. At the same time, by exploiting the ~ MeV scale excited states that
are automatically present in such theories, these models naturally explain the
DAMA/LIBRA and INTEGRAL signals through the inelastic dark matter (iDM) and
exciting dark matter (XDM) scenarios, respectively. Interestingly, with only
weak kinetic mixing to hypercharge to mediate decays, the lifetime of excited
states with delta < 2 m_e is longer than the age of the universe. The
fractional relic abundance of these excited states depends on the temperature
of kinetic decoupling, but can be appreciable. There could easily be other
mechanisms for rapid decay, but the consequences of such long-lived states are
intriguing. We find that CDMS constrains the fractional relic population of
~100 keV states to be <~ 10^-2, for a 1 TeV WIMP with sigma_n = 10^-40 cm^2.
Upcoming searches at CDMS, as well as xenon, silicon, and argon targets, can
push this limit significantly lower. We also consider the possibility that the
DAMA excitation occurs from a metastable state into the XDM state, which decays
via e+e- emission, which allows lighter states to explain the INTEGRAL signal
due to the small kinetic energies required. Such models yield dramatic signals
from down-scattering, with spectra peaking at high energies, sometimes as high
as ~1 MeV, well outside the usual search windows. Such signals would be visible
at future Ar and Si experiments, and may be visible at Ge and Xe experiments.
We also consider other XDM models involving ~ 500 keV metastable states, and
find they can allow lighter WIMPs to explain INTEGRAL as well.Comment: 22 pages, 7 figure
Atomic Dark Matter
We propose that dark matter is dominantly comprised of atomic bound states.
We build a simple model and map the parameter space that results in the early
universe formation of hydrogen-like dark atoms. We find that atomic dark matter
has interesting implications for cosmology as well as direct detection:
Protohalo formation can be suppressed below for weak scale dark matter due to Ion-Radiation interactions in the
dark sector. Moreover, weak-scale dark atoms can accommodate hyperfine
splittings of order 100 \kev, consistent with the inelastic dark matter
interpretation of the DAMA data while naturally evading direct detection
bounds.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figure
Two component dark matter
We explain the PAMELA positron excess and the PPB-BETS/ATIC e+ + e- data
using a simple two component dark matter model (2DM). The two particle species
in the dark matter sector are assumed to be in thermal equilibrium in the early
universe. While one particle is stable and is the present day dark matter, the
second one is metastable and decays after the universe is 10^-8 s old. In this
model it is simple to accommodate the large boost factors required to explain
the PAMELA positron excess without the need for large spikes in the local dark
matter density. We provide the constraints on the parameters of the model and
comment on possible signals at future colliders.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, discussion clarified and extende
Dark Matter Model Selection and the ATIC/PPB-BETS anomaly
We argue that we may be able to sort out dark matter models in which
electrons are generated through the annihilation and/or decay of dark matter,
by using a fact that the initial energy spectrum is reflected in the cosmic-ray
electron flux observed at the Earth even after propagation through the galactic
magnetic field. To illustrate our idea we focus on three representative initial
spectra: (i)monochromatic (ii)flat and (iii)double-peak ones. We find that
those three cases result in significantly different energy spectra, which may
be probed by the Fermi satellite in operation or an up-coming cosmic-ray
detector such as CALET.Comment: 19 pages, 8 figure
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