20 research outputs found
Antimatter signals of singlet scalar dark matter
We consider the singlet scalar model of dark matter and study the expected
antiproton and positron signals from dark matter annihilations. The regions of
the viable parameter space of the model that are excluded by present data are
determined, as well as those regions that will be probed by the forthcoming
experiment AMS-02. In all cases, different propagation models are investigated,
and the possible enhancement due to dark matter substructures is analyzed. We
find that the antiproton signal is more easily detectable than the positron one
over the whole parameter space. For a typical propagation model and without any
boost factor, AMS-02 will be able to probe --via antiprotons-- the singlet
model of dark matter up to masses of 600 GeV. Antiprotons constitute,
therefore, a promising signal to constraint or detect the singlet scalar model.Comment: 24 pages, 8 figures. v2: minor improvements. Accepted for publication
in JCA
A new viable region of the inert doublet model
The inert doublet model, a minimal extension of the Standard Model by a
second Higgs doublet, is one of the simplest and most attractive scenarios that
can explain the dark matter. In this paper, we demonstrate the existence of a
new viable region of the inert doublet model featuring dark matter masses
between Mw and about 160 GeV. Along this previously overlooked region of the
parameter space, the correct relic density is obtained thanks to cancellations
between different diagrams contributing to dark matter annihilation into gauge
bosons (W+W- and ZZ). First, we explain how these cancellations come about and
show several examples illustrating the effect of the parameters of the model on
the cancellations themselves and on the predicted relic density. Then, we
perform a full scan of the new viable region and analyze it in detail by
projecting it onto several two-dimensional planes. Finally, the prospects for
the direct and the indirect detection of inert Higgs dark matter within this
new viable region are studied. We find that present direct detection bounds
already rule out a fraction of the new parameter space and that future direct
detection experiments, such as Xenon100, will easily probe the remaining part
in its entirety.Comment: 27 pages, 16 figure
When LEP and Tevatron combined with WMAP and XENON100 shed light on the nature of Dark Matter
Recently, several astrophysical data or would-be signals has been observed in
different dark-matter oriented experiments. In each case, one could fit the
data at the price of specific nature of the coupling between the Standard Model
(SM) particles and a light Dark Matter candidate: hadrophobic (INTEGRAL,
PAMELA) or leptophobic (WMAP Haze, dijet anomalies of CDF, FERMI Galactic
Center observation). In this work, we show that when one takes into account the
more recent LEP and Tevatron analysis, a light thermal fermionic Dark Matte
(\lesssim 10 GeV) that couples to electrons is mainly ruled out if one combines
the analysis with WMAP constraints. We also study the special case of scalar
dark matter, using a mono-photon events simulation to constrain the coupling of
dark matter to electron.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
A simple inert model solves the little hierarchy problem and provides a dark matter candidate
We discuss a minimal extension to the standard model in which two singlet
scalar states that only interacts with the Higgs boson is added. Their masses
and interaction strengths are fixed by the two requirements of canceling the
one-loop quadratic corrections to the Higgs boson mass and providing a viable
dark matter candidate. Direct detection of the lightest of these new states in
nuclear scattering experiments is possible with a cross section within reach of
future experiments.Comment: Finite corrections included. Model modified. Conclusion unchange
Scalar Multiplet Dark Matter
We perform a systematic study of the phenomenology associated to models where
the dark matter consists in the neutral component of a scalar SU(2)_L n-uplet,
up to n=7. If one includes only the pure gauge induced annihilation
cross-sections it is known that such particles provide good dark matter
candidates, leading to the observed dark matter relic abundance for a
particular value of their mass around the TeV scale. We show that these values
actually become ranges of values -which we determine- if one takes into account
the annihilations induced by the various scalar couplings appearing in these
models. This leads to predictions for both direct and indirect detection
signatures as a function of the dark matter mass within these ranges. Both can
be largely enhanced by the quartic coupling contributions. We also explain how,
if one adds right-handed neutrinos to the scalar doublet case, the results of
this analysis allow to have altogether a viable dark matter candidate,
successful generation of neutrino masses, and leptogenesis in a particularly
minimal way with all new physics at the TeV scale.Comment: 43 pages, 20 figure
Global Study of the Simplest Scalar Phantom Dark Matter Model
We present a global study of the simplest scalar phantom dark matter model.
The best fit parameters of the model are determined by simultaneously imposing
(i) relic density constraint from WMAP, (ii) 225 live days data from direct
experiment XENON100, (iii) upper limit of gamma-ray flux from Fermi-LAT
indirect detection based on dwarf spheroidal satellite galaxies, and (iv) the
Higgs boson candidate with a mass about 125 GeV and its invisible branching
ratio no larger than 40% if the decay of the Higgs boson into a pair of dark
matter is kinematically allowed. The allowed parameter space is then used to
predict annihilation cross sections for gamma-ray lines, event rates for three
processes mono-b jet, single charged lepton and two charged leptons plus
missing energies at the Large Hadron Collider, as well as to evaluate the muon
anomalous magnetic dipole moment for the model.Comment: Matches JCAP accepted version. 25 pages, 7 figure
Complementarity of Galactic radio and collider data in constraining WIMP dark matter models
In this work we confront dark matter models to constraints that may be
derived from radio synchrotron radiation from the Galaxy, taking into account
the astrophysical uncertainties and we compare these to bounds set by
accelerator and complementary indirect dark matter searches. Specifically we
apply our analysis to three popular particle physics models. First, a generic
effective operator approach, in which case we set bounds on the corresponding
mass scale, and then, two specific UV completions, the Z' and Higgs portals. We
show that for many candidates, the radio synchrotron limits are competitive
with the other searches, and could even give the strongest constraints (as of
today) with some reasonable assumptions regarding the astrophysical
uncertainties.Comment: 22 pages, 12 figure
Quasi-Degenerate Neutrino Mass Spectrum, \mu -> e + \gamma Decay and Leptogenesis
In a large class of SUSY GUT models with see-saw mechanism of neutrino mass
generation, lepton flavor violating (LFV) decays , , etc., are predicted with rates that are within the reach of
present and planned experiments. A crucial element in these predictions is the
matrix of neutrino Yukawa couplings \ynu which can be expressed in terms of
the light and RH heavy neutrino masses, the neutrino mixing PMNS matrix ,
and an orthogonal matrix . Leptogenesis can take place only if
is complex. Considering the case of quasi-degenerate neutrinos and
assuming that is complex, we derive simple analytical expressions
for the , and
decay rates. Taking into account the leptogenesis constraints on the relevant
parameters we show that the predicted rates of the LFV decays , and are generically enhanced by a factor of
to with respect to the rates calculated for real
, while the decay rate is enhanced
approximately by two orders of magnitude.Comment: 17 pages, 1 figure; results and conclusions unchanged, typos
corrected, references added; version submitted for publicatio