349 research outputs found
Determining Ratios of WIMP-Nucleon Cross Sections from Direct Dark Matter Detection Data
Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (WIMPs) are one of the leading
candidates for Dark Matter. So far the usual procedure for constraining the
WIMP-nucleon cross sections in direct Dark Matter detection experiments have
been to fit the predicted event rate based on some model(s) of the Galactic
halo and of WIMPs to experimental data. One has to assume whether the
spin-independent (SI) or the spin-dependent (SD) WIMP-nucleus interaction
dominates, and results of such data analyses are also expressed as functions of
the as yet unknown WIMP mass. In this article, I introduce methods for
extracting information on the WIMP-nucleon cross sections by considering a
general combination of the SI and SD interactions. Neither prior knowledge
about the local density and the velocity distribution of halo WIMPs nor about
their mass is needed. Assuming that an exponential-like shape of the recoil
spectrum is confirmed from experimental data, the required information are only
the measured recoil energies (in low energy ranges) and the number of events in
the first energy bin from two or more experiments.Comment: 33 pages, 20 eps figures; v2: typos fixed, references added and
updated, revised version for publicatio
Determining the Mass of Dark Matter Particles with Direct Detection Experiments
In this article I review two data analysis methods for determining the mass
(and eventually the spin-independent cross section on nucleons) of Weakly
Interacting Massive Particles with positive signals from direct Dark Matter
detection experiments: a maximum likelihood analysis with only one experiment
and a model-independent method requiring at least two experiments.
Uncertainties and caveats of these methods will also be discussed.Comment: 24 pages, 10 figures, 1 reference added, typos fixed, published
version, to appear in the NJP Focus Issue on "Dark Matter and Particle
Physics
Analyzing direct dark matter detection data with unrejected background events by the AMIDAS website
In this talk I have presented the data analysis results of extracting
properties of halo WIMPs: the mass and the (ratios between the)
spin-independent and spin-dependent couplings/cross sections on nucleons by the
AMIDAS website by taking into account possible unrejected background events in
the analyzed data sets. Although non-standard astronomical setup has been used
to generate pseudodata sets for our analyses, it has been found that, without
prior information/assumption about the local density and velocity distribution
of halo Dark Matter, these WIMP properties have been reconstructed with ~ 2% to
<~ 30% deviations from the input values.Comment: 9 pages, 10 eps figures, 1 table, to appear in the proceedings of the
Seventh International Workshop on the Dark Side of the Universe (DSU 2011),
September 26-30, 2011, Beijing, Chin
Effects of Residue Background Events in Direct Dark Matter Detection Experiments on the Determination of the WIMP Mass
In the earlier work on the development of a model-independent data analysis
method for determining the mass of Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (WIMPs)
by using measured recoil energies from direct Dark Matter detection experiments
directly, it was assumed that the analyzed data sets are background-free, i.e.,
all events are WIMP signals. In this article, as a more realistic study, we
take into account a fraction of possible residue background events, which pass
all discrimination criteria and then mix with other real WIMP-induced events in
our data sets. Our simulations show that, for the determination of the WIMP
mass, the maximal acceptable fraction of residue background events in the
analyzed data sets of O(50) total events is ~20%, for background windows of the
entire experimental possible energy ranges, or in low energy ranges; while, for
background windows in relatively higher energy ranges, this maximal acceptable
fraction of residue background events can not be larger than ~10%. For a WIMP
mass of 100 GeV with 20% background events in the windows of the entire
experimental possible energy ranges, the reconstructed WIMP mass and the
1-sigma statistical uncertainty are ~97 GeV^{+61%}_{-35%} (~94
GeV^{+55%}_{-33%} for background-free data sets).Comment: 27 pages, 22 eps figures; v2: revised version for publication,
references added and update
What can(not) be measured with ton-scale dark matter direct detection experiments
Direct searches for dark matter have prompted in recent years a great deal of
excitement within the astroparticle physics community, but the compatibility
between signal claims and null results of different experiments is far from
being a settled issue. In this context, we study here the prospects for
constraining the dark matter parameter space with the next generation of
ton-scale detectors. Using realistic experimental capabilities for a wide range
of targets (including fluorine, sodium, argon, germanium, iodine and xenon),
the role of target complementarity is analysed in detail while including the
impact of astrophysical uncertainties in a self-consistent manner. We show
explicitly that a multi-target signal in future direct detection facilities can
determine the sign of the ratio of scalar couplings , but not its
scale. This implies that the scalar-proton cross-section is left essentially
unconstrained if the assumption is relaxed. Instead, we find that
both the axial-proton cross-section and the ratio of axial couplings
can be measured with fair accuracy if multi-ton instruments using sodium and
iodine will eventually come online. Moreover, it turns out that future direct
detection data can easily discriminate between elastic and inelastic
scatterings. Finally, we argue that, with weak assumptions regarding the WIMP
couplings and the astrophysics, only the dark matter mass and the inelastic
parameter (i.e. mass splitting) may be inferred from the recoil spectra --
specifically, we anticipate an accuracy of tens of GeV (tens of keV) in the
measurement of the dark matter mass (inelastic parameter).Comment: 31 pages, 7 figures, 7 table
What it takes to measure a fundamental difference between dark matter and baryons: the halo velocity anisotropy
Numerous ongoing experiments aim at detecting WIMP dark matter particles from
the galactic halo directly through WIMP-nucleon interactions. Once such a
detection is established a confirmation of the galactic origin of the signal is
needed. This requires a direction-sensitive detector. We show that such a
detector can measure the velocity anisotropy beta of the galactic halo.
Cosmological N-body simulations predict the dark matter anisotropy to be
nonzero, beta~0.2. Baryonic matter has beta=0 and therefore a detection of a
nonzero beta would be strong proof of the fundamental difference between dark
and baryonic matter. We estimate the sensitivity for various detector
configurations using Monte Carlo methods and we show that the strongest signal
is found in the relatively few high recoil energy events. Measuring beta to the
precision of ~0.03 will require detecting more than 10^4 WIMP events with
nuclear recoil energies greater than 100 keV for a WIMP mass of 100 GeV and a
32S target. This number corresponds to ~10^6 events at all energies. We discuss
variations with respect to input parameters and we show that our method is
robust to the presence of backgrounds and discuss the possible improved
sensitivity for an energy-sensitive detector.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures, accepted by JCAP. Matches accepted versio
Annihilation vs. Decay: Constraining dark matter properties from a gamma-ray detection
Most proposed dark matter candidates are stable and are produced thermally in
the early Universe. However, there is also the possibility of unstable (but
long-lived) dark matter, produced thermally or otherwise. We propose a strategy
to distinguish between dark matter annihilation and/or decay in the case that a
clear signal is detected in gamma-ray observations of Milky Way dwarf
spheroidal galaxies with gamma-ray experiments. The sole measurement of the
energy spectrum of an indirect signal would render the discrimination between
these cases impossible. We show that by examining the dependence of the
intensity and energy spectrum on the angular distribution of the emission, the
origin could be identified as decay, annihilation, or both. In addition, once
the type of signal is established, we show how these measurements could help to
extract information about the dark matter properties, including mass,
annihilation cross section, lifetime, dominant annihilation and decay channels,
and the presence of substructure. Although an application of the approach
presented here would likely be feasible with current experiments only for very
optimistic dark matter scenarios, the improved sensitivity of upcoming
experiments could enable this technique to be used to study a wider range of
dark matter models.Comment: 29 pp, 8 figs; replaced to match published version (minor changes and
some new references
Many faces of low mass neutralino dark matter in the unconstrained MSSM, LHC data and new signals
If all strongly interacting sparticles (the squarks and the gluinos) in an
unconstrained minimal supersymmetric standard model (MSSM) are heavier than the
corresponding mass lower limits in the minimal supergravity (mSUGRA) model,
obtained by the current LHC experiments, then the existing data allow a variety
of electroweak (EW) sectors with light sparticles yielding dark matter (DM)
relic density allowed by the WMAP data. Some of the sparticles may lie just
above the existing lower bounds from LEP and lead to many novel DM producing
mechanisms not common in mSUGRA. This is illustrated by revisiting the above
squark-gluino mass limits obtained by the ATLAS Collaboration, with an
unconstrained EW sector with masses not correlated with the strong sector.
Using their selection criteria and the corresponding cross section limits, we
find at the generator level using Pythia, that the changes in the mass limits,
if any, are by at most 10-12% in most scenarios. In some cases, however, the
relaxation of the gluino mass limits are larger (). If a subset of
the strongly interacting sparticles in an unconstrained MSSM are within the
reach of the LHC, then signals sensitive to the EW sector may be obtained. This
is illustrated by simulating the \etslash, , and \etslash signals in i) the light stop scenario and ii) the light
stop-gluino scenario with various light EW sectors allowed by the WMAP data.
Some of the more general models may be realized with non-universal scalar and
gaugino masses.Comment: 27 pages, 1 figure, references added, minor changes in text, to
appear in JHE
Determining the WIMP mass using the complementarity between direct and indirect searches and the ILC
We study the possibility of identifying dark matter properties from
XENON-like 100 kg experiments and the GLAST satellite mission. We show that
whereas direct detection experiments will probe efficiently light WIMPs, given
a positive detection (at the 10% level for GeV), GLAST
will be able to confirm and even increase the precision in the case of a NFW
profile, for a WIMP-nucleon cross-section
pb. We also predict the rate of production of a WIMP in the next generation of
colliders (ILC), and compare their sensitivity to the WIMP mass with the XENON
and GLAST projects.Comment: 32 pages, new figures and a more detailed statistical analysis. Final
version to appear in JCA
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