157 research outputs found
Dark antiatoms can explain DAMA
We show that the existence of a sub-dominant form of dark matter, made of
dark antiatoms of mass and size of the order of 1 TeV and 30 fm respectively,
can explain the results of direct detection experiments, with a positive signal
in DAMA/NaI and DAMA/LIBRA and no signal in other experiments. The signal comes
from the binding of the dark antiatoms to thallium, a dopant in DAMA, and is
not present for the constituent atoms of other experiments. The dark antiatoms
are made of two particles oppositely charged under a dark U(1) symmetry and can
bind to terrestrial atoms because of a kinetic mixing between the photon and
the massless dark photon, such that the dark particles acquire an electric
millicharge of the order of 0.0005e. This millicharge enables them to bind to
high-Z atoms via radiative capture, after they thermalize in terrestrial matter
through elastic collisions.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figure
The structure and analytic properties of the scattering amplitude at LHC energies
Elastic proton-proton scattering is reviewed starting from the results of the
LHC experiments conducted by the TOTEM and ATLAS collaborations, and the HEGS
model and a simple phenomenological parametrisation are compared with the new
data on the differential elastic proton-proton scattering cross section, which
detect a non-exponential behaviour of the differential cross sections in the
first diffraction cone. We consider the influence of various assumptions on the
extraction of the elastic scattering parameters, and on the deduction of the
total cross section.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, talk presented at EDS Blois 2017, Prague, Czech
Republic, June 26-30,201
Pseudoscalar Vertex and Quark Masses
We analyse available data on the quark pseudoscalar vertex and extract the
contribution og the Goldstone boson pole. The strength of the pole is found to
be quite large at presently accessible scales. We draw the important
consequences of this finding for the various definitions of quark masses.Comment: LATTICE99 (Improvement and Renormalization), 3 p., 3 fi
The importance of the Einstein Telescope for Belgian science
Introductory talk to the conference "The Einstein Telescope project
Impact of saturation on spin effects in proton-proton scattering
For pomerons described by a sum of two simple-pole terms, a soft and a hard pomeron, the unitarity bounds from saturation in impact-parameter space are examined. We consider the effect of these bounds on observables linked with polarisation, such as the analyzing power A(N) in elastic proton-proton scattering, for LHC energies. We obtain the s and t dependence of the Coulomb-nuclear interference at small momentum transfer, and show that the effect of the hard pomeron may be observed at the LHC
Asymptotics of the S-matrix and unitarisation
The manner in which the elastic scattering amplitude obeys unitarity, how it enters
the circle of unitarity, and what its asymptotic limit is, remains a problem for models
which include terms that rise fast with s. We have checked that the features of cross
sections which come from unitarisation are present for most unitarisation schemes, e.g.
those that saturate the profile function or those that describe multiple exchanges via an
analytic formula. We have also obtained a scheme which interpolates between different
classes of the unitarisation and found corresponding non-linear equations. Considering
different forms of energy dependence of the scattering amplitude, and a variety of
unitarisation schemes, we show that, in order to reproduce the data, the fits choose an
amplitude that corresponds to an asymptotic value S = 0
Can axionlike particles explain the alignments of the polarizations of light from quasars?
peer reviewedThe standard axion-like particle explanation of the observed large-scale coherent orientations of quasar polarisation vectors is ruled out by the recent measurements of vanishing of circular polarisation.
We introduce a more general wave-packet formalism and show that, although decoherence effects between waves of different frequencies can reduce significantly the amount of circular polarisation, the axion-like particle hypothesis is disfavoured given the bandwidth with which part of the observations were performed.
Finally, we show that a more sophisticated model of extragalactic fields does not lead to an alignment of polarisations
Some potential problems of OHe composite dark matter
Among composite-dark-matter scenarios, one of the simplest and most
predictive is that of O-helium (OHe) dark atoms, in which a lepton-like doubly
charged particle O is bound with a primordial helium nucleus, and is the main
constituent of dark matter. This model liberates the physics of dark matter
from many unknown features of new physics, and it demands a deep understanding
of the details of known nuclear and atomic physics, which are still somewhat
unclear in the case of nuclear interacting "atomic" shells. So far the model
has relied on the dominance of elastic scattering of OHe with the matter. In
view of the uncertainty in our understanding of OHe interaction with nuclei we
study the opposite scenario, in which inelastic nuclear reactions dominate the
OHe interactions with nuclei. We show that in this case all the OHe atoms bind
with extra He nuclei, forming doubly charged O-beryllium ions, which behave
like anomalous helium, causing potential problems with overabundance of
anomalous isotopes in terrestrial matter.Comment: To appear in Proceedings of the 17th Bled Workshop "What Comes Beyond
Standard Models?
The proton inelastic cross section at ultrahigh energies
We study the consequences of high-energy collider data on the best fits to
total, elastic, and inelastic cross sections for and scattering
using two very distinct unitarisation schemes: the eikonal and the -matrix.
Despite their analytic differences, we find that the two schemes lead to almost
identical predictions up to EeV energies, with differences only becoming
significant at GUT-scale and higher energies.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
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