613 research outputs found
Antimatter Bounds by Anti-Asteroids annihilations on Planets and Sun
The existence of antimatter stars in the Galaxy as possible signature for
inflationary models with non-homogeneous baryo-synthesis may leave the trace by
antimatter cosmic rays as well as by their secondaries (anti-planets and
anti-meteorites) diffused bodies in our galactic halo. The anti-meteorite flux
may leave its explosive gamma signature by colliding on lunar soil as well as
on terrestrial, jovian and solar atmospheres. However the propagation in galaxy
and the consequent evaporation in galactic matter gas suppress the lightest (m
< 10^(-2)g) anti-meteorites. Anisotropic annihilation of larger anti-meteorites
within a narrow mass window, maybe rarely deflected, bounced by the galactic
gas disk, escaping detection in our solar system. Nevertheless heaviest
anti-meteorites (m > 10^(-1)g up to 10^(6)g) are unable to be deflected by the
thin galactic gas surface annihilation; they might hit the Sun (or rarely
Jupiter) leading to an explosive gamma event and a spectacular track with a
bouncing and even a propelling annihilation on cromosphere and photosphere.
Their anti-nuclei annihilation in pions and their final hard gammas showering
may be observabe as a "solar flare" at a rate nearly comparable to the observed
ones. From their absence we may infer bounds on antimatter-matter ratio near or
below 10^(-9) limit: already recorded data in BATSE catalog might be applied.Comment: 6 pages, more accurate estimate and minor correction
Primordial heavy elements in composite dark matter models
A widely accepted viewpoint is to consider candidates for cosmological dark
matter as neutral and weakly interacting particles, as well as to consider only
light elements in the pregalactic chemical composition. It is shown that stable
charged leptons and quarks can exist and, hidden in elusive atoms, play the
role of dark matter. The inevitable consequence of realistic scenarios with
such composite atom-like dark matter is existence of significant or even
dominant fraction of "atoms", binding heavy -2 charged particles and He-4
nuclei. Being alpha-particles with shielded electric charge, such atoms
catalyse a new path of nuclear transformations in the period of Big Bang
Nucleosynthesis, which result in primordial heavy elements. The arguments are
given, why such scenario escapes immediate contradiction with observations and
challenges search for heavy stable charged particles in cosmic rays and at
accelerators.Comment: Prepared for Proceedings of Blois2007 Conferenc
Probes for 4th generation constituents of dark atoms in Higgs boson studies at the LHC
The nonbaryonic dark matter of the Universe can consist of new stable charged
species, bound in heavy neutral "atoms" by ordinary Coulomb interaction. Stable
(anti-)quarks of 4th generation, bound in stable colorless () clusters, are captured by the primordial helium, produced in
Big Bang Nucleosynthesis, thus forming neutral "atoms" of O-helium (OHe), a
specific nuclear interacting dark matter that can provide solution for the
puzzles of direct dark matter searches. However, the existence of the 4th
generation quarks and leptons should influence the production and decay rates
of Higgs boson and is ruled out by the experimental results of the Higgs boson
searches at the LHC, if the Higgs boson coupling to 4th generation fermions
with is not suppressed. Here we argue that the difference between the three
known quark-lepton families and the 4th family can naturally lead to
suppression of this coupling, relating the accelerator test for such a
composite dark matter scenario to the detailed study of the production and
modes of decay of the 125.5 GeV boson, discovered at the LHC.Comment: Prepared for the Special issue "Dark atoms and dark radiation" of
Advances in High Energy Physic
Baryomorphosis: Relating the Baryon Asymmetry to the "WIMP Miracle"
We present a generic framework, "baryomorphosis", which modifies the baryon
asymmetry to be naturally of the order of a typical thermal relic WIMP density.
We consider a simple scalar-based model to show how this is possible. This
model introduces a sector in which a large initial baryon asymmetry is injected
into particles ("annihilons") phi_B, \bar{phi}_B of mass ~ 100 GeV - 1 TeV.
phi_B-\bar{phi}_B annihilations convert the initial phi_B, \bar{phi}_B
asymmetry to a final asymmetry with a thermal relic WIMP-like density. This
subsequently decays to a conventional baryon asymmetry whose magnitude is
naturally related to the density of thermal relic WIMP dark matter. In this way
the two coincidences of baryons and dark matter i.e. why their densities are
similar to each other and why they are both similar to a WIMP thermal relic
density (the "WIMP miracle"), may be understood. The model may be tested by the
production of annihilons at colliders.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures; Modified to address B washout issue. Higgs
replaced by inert doublet, no mixing of annihilons. Version to be published
in PRD, typos correcte
Puzzles of Dark Matter - More Light on Dark Atoms?
Positive results of dark matter searches in experiments DAMA/NaI and
DAMA/LIBRA confronted with results of other groups can imply nontrivial
particle physics solutions for cosmological dark matter. Stable particles with
charge -2, bound with primordial helium in O-helium "atoms" (OHe), represent a
specific nuclear-interacting form of dark matter. Slowed down in the
terrestrial matter, OHe is elusive for direct methods of underground Dark
matter detection using its nuclear recoil. However, low energy binding of OHe
with sodium nuclei can lead to annual variations of energy release from OHe
radiative capture in the interval of energy 2-4 keV in DAMA/NaI and DAMA/LIBRA
experiments. At nuclear parameters, reproducing DAMA results, the energy
release predicted for detectors with chemical content other than NaI differ in
the most cases from the one in DAMA detector. Moreover there is no bound
systems of OHe with light and heavy nuclei, so that there is no radiative
capture of OHe in detectors with xenon or helium content. Due to dipole Coulomb
barrier, transitions to more energetic levels of Na+OHe system with much higher
energy release are suppressed in the correspondence with the results of DAMA
experiments. The proposed explanation inevitably leads to prediction of
abundance of anomalous Na, corresponding to the signal, observed by DAMA.Comment: Contribution to Proceedings of XIII Bled Workshop "What Comes beyond
the Standard Model?
Remark on the minimal seesaw model and leptogenesis with tri/bi-maximal mixing
We have studied a leptogenesis scenario in the framework of the minimal
seesaw model with tri/bi-maximal mixing. Usually, at least one of the elements
in the Dirac mass matrix is fixed to be zero, for example, we denote it by
. We have pointed out that the absolute value of the CP asymmetry has
several minimums and maximums with non-zero . Thus one can expect that
more rich phenomena, such as an enhanced leptogenesis, are hidden in the space.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, uses RevTex4. To appear in Physcal Review
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