1,076 research outputs found
Optical Properties of the DIRC Fused Silica Cherenkov Radiator
The DIRC is a new type of Cherenkov detector that is successfully operating
as the hadronic particle identification system for the BABAR experiment at
SLAC. The fused silica bars that serve as the DIRC's Cherenkov radiators must
transmit the light over long optical pathlengths with a large number of
internal reflections. This imposes a number of stringent and novel requirements
on the bar properties. This note summarizes a large amount of R&D that was
performed both to develop specifications and production methods and to
determine whether commercially produced bars could meet the requirements. One
of the major outcomes of this R&D work is an understanding of methods to select
radiation hard and optically uniform fused silica material. Others include
measurement of the wavelength dependency of the internal reflection
coefficient, and its sensitivity to surface contaminants, development of
radiator support methods, and selection of good optical glue.Comment: 36 pages, submitted to Nuclear Instruments and Methods
Constraints on Lorentz Invariance Violation from Fermi-Large Area Telescope Observations of Gamma-Ray Bursts
We analyze the MeV/GeV emission from four bright Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs)
observed by the Fermi-Large Area Telescope to produce robust, stringent
constraints on a dependence of the speed of light in vacuo on the photon energy
(vacuum dispersion), a form of Lorentz invariance violation (LIV) allowed by
some Quantum Gravity (QG) theories. First, we use three different and
complementary techniques to constrain the total degree of dispersion observed
in the data. Additionally, using a maximally conservative set of assumptions on
possible source-intrinsic spectral-evolution effects, we constrain any vacuum
dispersion solely attributed to LIV. We then derive limits on the "QG energy
scale" (the energy scale that LIV-inducing QG effects become important, E_QG)
and the coefficients of the Standard Model Extension. For the subluminal case
(where high energy photons propagate more slowly than lower energy photons) and
without taking into account any source-intrinsic dispersion, our most stringent
limits (at 95% CL) are obtained from GRB090510 and are E_{QG,1}>7.6 times the
Planck energy (E_Pl) and E_{QG,2}>1.3 x 10^11 GeV for linear and quadratic
leading order LIV-induced vacuum dispersion, respectively. These limits improve
the latest constraints by Fermi and H.E.S.S. by a factor of ~2. Our results
disfavor any class of models requiring E_{QG,1} \lesssim E_Pl.Comment: Accepted for publication by Physical Review
A Parameterization Invariant Approach to the Statistical Estimation of the CKM Phase
In contrast to previous analyses, we demonstrate a Bayesian approach to the
estimation of the CKM phase that is invariant to parameterization. We
also show that in addition to {\em computing} the marginal posterior in a
Bayesian manner, the distribution must also be {\em interpreted} from a
subjective Bayesian viewpoint. Doing so gives a very natural interpretation to
the distribution. We also comment on the effect of removing information about
.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, minor revision; to appear in JHE
Study of the Gamma-ray Spectrum from the Galactic Center in view of Multi-TeV Dark Matter Candidates
Motivated by the complex gamma-ray spectrum of the Galactic Center source now
measured over five decades in energy, we revisit the issue of the role of dark
matter annihilations in this interesting region. We reassess whether the
emission measured by the HESS collaboration could be a signature of dark matter
annihilation, and we use the {\em Fermi} LAT spectrum to model the emission
from SgrA*, using power-law spectral fits. We find that good fits are achieved
by a power law with an index , in combination with a spectrum
similar to the one observed from pulsar population and with a spectrum from a
\gsi10 TeV DM annihilating to a mixture of and harder channels and with boost factors of the order of a hundred.
Alternatively, we also consider the combination of a log-parabola fit with the
DM contribution. Finally, as both the spectrum of gamma rays from the Galactic
Center and the spectrum of cosmic ray electrons exhibit a cutoff at TeV
energies, we study the dark matter fits to both data-sets. Constraining the
spectral shape of the purported dark matter signal provides a robust way of
comparing data. We find a marginal overlap only between the 99.999% C.L.
regions in parameter space.Comment: 16 pages, 14 figure
The Origin of the Extragalactic Gamma-Ray Background and Implications for Dark-Matter Annihilation
The origin of the extragalactic -ray background (EGB) has been
debated for some time. { The EGB comprises the -ray emission from
resolved and unresolved extragalactic sources, such as blazars, star-forming
galaxies and radio galaxies, as well as radiation from truly diffuse
processes.} This letter focuses on the blazar source class, the most numerous
detected population, and presents an updated luminosity function and spectral
energy distribution model consistent with the blazar observations performed by
the {\it Fermi} Large Area Telescope (LAT). We show that blazars account for
50\,\% of the EGB photons (0.1\,GeV), and that {\it Fermi}-LAT
has already resolved 70\,\% of this contribution. Blazars, and in
particular low-luminosity hard-spectrum nearby sources like BL Lacs, are
responsible for most of the EGB emission above 100\,GeV. We find that the
extragalactic background light, which attenuates blazars' high-energy emission,
is responsible for the high-energy cut-off observed in the EGB spectrum.
Finally, we show that blazars, star-forming galaxies and radio galaxies can
naturally account for the amplitude and spectral shape of the background in the
0.1--820\,GeV range, leaving only modest room for other contributions. This
allows us to set competitive constraints on the dark-matter annihilation cross
section.Comment: On behalf of the Fermi-LAT collaboration. Contact authors: M. Ajello,
D. Gasparrini, M. Sanchez-Conde, G. Zaharijas, M. Gustafsson. Accepted for
publication on ApJ
Design and performance of a Collimated Beam Projector for telescope transmission measurement using a broadband light source
Type Ia supernovae are the most direct cosmological probe to study dark
energy in the recent Universe, for which the photometric calibration of
astronomical instruments remains one major source of systematic uncertainties.
To address this, recent advancements introduce Collimated Beam Projectors
(CBP), aiming to enhance calibration by precisely measuring a telescope's
throughput as a function of wavelength. This work describes the performance of
a prototype portable CBP. The experimental setup consists of a broadband Xenon
light source replacing a more customary but much more demanding high-power
laser source, coupled with a monochromator emitting light inside an integrating
sphere monitored with a photodiode and a spectrograph. Light is injected at the
focus of the CBP telescope projecting a collimated beam onto a solar cell whose
quantum efficiency has been obtained by comparison with a NIST-calibrated
photodiode. The throughput and signal-to-noise ratio achieved by comparing the
photocurrent signal in the CBP photodiode to the one in the solar cell are
computed. We prove that the prototype, in its current state of development, is
capable of achieving 1.2 per cent and 2.3 per cent precision on the integrated
g and r bands of the ZTF photometric filter system respectively, in a
reasonable amount of integration time. Central wavelength determination
accuracy is kept below {0.91} nm and {0.58} nm for g and r bands.
The expected photometric uncertainty caused by filter throughput measurement is
approximately 5 mmag on the zero-point magnitude. Several straightforward
improvement paths are discussed to upgrade the current setup.Comment: submitted to RAS Techniques & Instruments (RASTI
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Search for Gamma-rays from Lightest Kaluza-Klein ParticleDark Matter with GLAST
The Gamma-Ray Large Area Space Telescope (GLAST), scheduled to be launched in 2007, is the next generation satellite for high-energy gamma-ray astronomy. The Large Area Telescope (LAT), GLAST main instrument, has a wide field of view (> 2 sr), a large effective area and a 20 MeV-300 GeV energy range. It provides excellent high-energy gamma-ray observations for Dark-Matter searches. Here we study the possibility to detect gamma-rays coming from Lightest Kaluza-Klein Particle (LKP) annihilations in the context of the minimal Universal Extra Dimensions (UED) models. We perform the analysis for different LKP masses and for a Galactic Center (GC) Navarro, Frenk and White (NFW) halo model modified by a boost factor parameter. Finally we give an estimate of the background to obtain the expected total gamma-ray flux and the corresponding expected GLAST sensitivity
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