6,023 research outputs found
Astrophysical inputs on the SUSY dark matter annihilation detectability
If dark matter (DM), which is considered to constitute most of the mass of
galaxies, is made of supersymmetric (SUSY) particles, the centers of galaxies
should emit gamma-rays produced by their self-annihilation. We present accurate
estimates of continuum gamma-ray fluxes due to neutralino annihilation in the
central regions of the Milky Way. We use detailed models of our Galaxy, which
satisfy available observational data, and include some important physical
processes, which were previously neglected. Our models predict that spatially
extended annihilation signal should be detected at high confidence levels by
incoming experiments assuming that neutralinos make up most of the DM in the
Universe and that they annihilate according to current SUSY models.Comment: 4 pages, submitted to Physical Review Letter
From sport to deporte: a discussion etymological, semantic and conceptual in the spanish laguage
En la lengua castellana la palabra deporte, plantea de entrada una triple discusión: de carácter etimológico, semántico y conceptual. Este es el objeto de estudio de este artículo analizar los precedentes históricos de la palabra deporte y trazar su evolución hasta desembocar en el término actual,
desde este enfoque trinitario. Para ello nos basamos en la recuperación de fuentes documentales originales, algunas de ellas inéditas y otras poco conocidas o consideradas, que nos permitan adquirir nuevos conocimientos y nos obligan a reinterpretar y corregir algunas afirmaciones actuales.In Spanish, the word deporte (sport) raises a debate that is three-fold: etymological, semantic and conceptual. The study object of this article is to analize the historical precedents of the word deporte and to trace its evolution up to the present day term, from this trinitarian approach. For this purpose, we based our work on recovering original documentary sources, some of which were unpublished, other were little known or rarely considered. The aim is for these sources to allow us to acquire new knowledge and force us to reinterpret and correct some current claim
The commissioning of CMS sites: improving the site reliability
The computing system of the CMS experiment works using distributed resources from more than 60 computing centres worldwide. These centres, located in Europe, America and Asia are interconnected by the Worldwide LHC Computing Grid. The operation of the system requires a stable and reliable behaviour of the underlying infrastructure. CMS has established a procedure to extensively test all relevant aspects of a Grid site, such as the ability to efficiently use their network to transfer data, the functionality of all the site services relevant for CMS and the capability to sustain the various CMS computing workflows at the required scale. This contribution describes in detail the procedure to rate CMS sites depending on their performance, including the complete automation of the program, the description of monitoring tools, and its impact in improving the overall reliability of the Grid from the point of view of the CMS computing system
Do the Unidentified EGRET Sources Trace Annihilating Dark Matter in the Local Group?
In a cold dark matter (CDM) framework of structure formation, the dark matter
haloes around galaxies assemble through successive mergers with smaller haloes.
This merging process is not completely efficient, and hundreds of surviving
halo cores, or {\it subhaloes}, are expected to remain in orbit within the halo
of a galaxy like the Milky Way. While the dozen visible satellites of the Milky
Way may trace some of these subhaloes, the majority are currently undetected. A
large number of high-velocity clouds (HVCs) of neutral hydrogen {\it are}
observed around the Milky Way, and it is plausible that some of the HVCs may
trace subhaloes undetected in the optical. Confirming the existence of
concentrations of dark matter associated with even a few of the HVCs would
represent a dramatic step forward in our attempts to understand the nature of
dark matter. Supersymmetric (SUSY) extensions of the Standard Model of particle
physics currently suggest neutralinos as a natural well-motivated candidate for
the non-baryonic dark matter of the universe. If this is indeed the case, then
it may be possible to detect dark matter indirectly as it annihilates into
neutrinos, photons or positrons. In particular, the centres of subhaloes might
show up as point sources in gamma-ray observations. In this work we consider
the possibility that some of the unidentified EGRET -ray sources trace
annihilating neutralino dark matter in the dark substructure of the Local
Group. We compare the observed positions and fluxes of both the unidentified
EGRET sources and the HVCs with the positions and fluxes predicted by a model
of halo substructure, to determine to what extent any of these three
populations could be associated.Comment: 12 Pages, 4 figures, to appear in a special issue of ApSS. Presented
at "The Multiwavelength Approach to Unidentified Gamma-Ray Sources" (Hong
Kong, June 1 - 4, 2004; Conference organizers: K.S. Cheng and G.E. Romero
New allowed mSUGRA parameter space from variations of the trilinear scalar coupling A0
In minimal Supergravity (mSUGRA) models the lightest supersymmetric particle
(assumed to be the lightest neutralino) provides an excellent cold dark matter
(CDM) candidate. The supersymmetric parameter space is significantly reduced,
if the limits on the CDM relic density, obtained from WMAP data, are used.
Assuming a vanishing trilinear scalar coupling A0 and fixed values of
tan(beta), these limits result in narrow lines of allowed regions in the
m0-m1/2 plane, the so called WMAP strips. In this analysis the trilinear
coupling A0 has been varied within +/-4 TeV. A fixed non vanishing A0 value
leads to a shift of the WMAP strips in the m0-m1/2 plane.Comment: Typos corrected, Fig.1. updated, references adde
Extending the distributed computing infrastructure of the CMS experiment with HPC resources
Particle accelerators are an important tool to study the fundamental properties of elementary particles. Currently the highest energy accelerator is the LHC at CERN, in Geneva, Switzerland. Each of its four major detectors, such as the CMS detector, produces dozens of Petabytes of data per year to be analyzed by a large international collaboration. The processing is carried out on the Worldwide LHC Computing Grid, that spans over more than 170 compute centers around the world and is used by a number of particle physics experiments. Recently the LHC experiments were encouraged to make increasing use of HPC resources. While Grid resources are homogeneous with respect to the used Grid middleware, HPC installations can be very different in their setup. In order to integrate HPC resources into the highly automatized processing setups of the CMS experiment a number of challenges need to be addressed. For processing, access to primary data and metadata as well as access to the software is required. At Grid sites all this is achieved via a number of services that are provided by each center. However at HPC sites many of these capabilities cannot be easily provided and have to be enabled in the user space or enabled by other means. At HPC centers there are often restrictions regarding network access to remote services, which is again a severe limitation. The paper discusses a number of solutions and recent experiences by the CMS experiment to include HPC resources in processing campaigns
First bounds on the very high energy gamma-ray emission from Arp 220
Using the Major Atmospheric Gamma Imaging Cherenkov Telescope (MAGIC), we
have observed the nearest ultra-luminous infrared galaxy Arp 220 for about 15
hours. No significant signal was detected within the dedicated amount of
observation time. The first upper limits to the very high energy -ray
flux of Arp 220 are herein reported and compared with theoretical expectations.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Two photon annihilation of Kaluza-Klein dark matter
We investigate the fermionic one-loop cross section for the two photon
annihilation of Kaluza-Klein (KK) dark matter particles in a model of universal
extra dimensions (UED). This process gives a nearly mono-energetic gamma-ray
line with energy equal to the KK dark matter particle mass. We find that the
cross section is large enough that if a continuum signature is detected, the
energy distribution of gamma-rays should end at the particle mass with a peak
that is visible for an energy resolution of the detector at the percent level.
This would give an unmistakable signature of a dark matter origin of the
gamma-rays, and a unique determination of the dark matter particle mass, which
in the case studied should be around 800 GeV. Unlike the situation for
supersymmetric models where the two-gamma peak may or may not be visible
depending on parameters, this feature seems to be quite robust in UED models,
and should be similar in other models where annihilation into fermions is not
helicity suppressed. The observability of the signal still depends on largely
unknown astrophysical parameters related to the structure of the dark matter
halo. If the dark matter near the galactic center is adiabatically contracted
by the central star cluster, or if the dark matter halo has substructure
surviving tidal effects, prospects for detection look promising.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures; slightly revised versio
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