4,016 research outputs found

    Determining the Mass of Dark Matter Particles with Direct Detection Experiments

    Full text link
    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

    Determining Ratios of WIMP-Nucleon Cross Sections from Direct Dark Matter Detection Data

    Full text link
    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

    Non-zero trilinear parameter in the mSUGRA model - dark matter and collider signals at Tevatron and LHC

    Full text link
    Phenomenologically viable and interesting regions of parameter space in the minimal super-gravity (mSUGRA) model with small m0m_0 and small m1/2m_{1/2} consistent with the WMAP data on dark matter relic density and the bound on the mass of the lightest Higgs scalar mh> m_h> 114 GeV from LEP2 open up if the rather adhoc assumption A0A_0=0, where A0A_0 is the common trilinear soft breaking parameter, employed in most of the existing analyses is relaxed. Since this region corresponds to relatively light squarks and gluinos which are likely to be probed extensively in the very early stages of the LHC experiments, the consequences of moderate or large negative values of A0A_0 are examined in detail. We find that in this region several processes including lightest supersymmetric particle (LSP) pair annihilation, LSP - lighter tau slepton (τ~1{\tilde \tau}_1) coannihilation and LSP - lighter top squark (t~1{\tilde t}_1) coannihilation contribute to the observed dark matter relic density. %\sout{The possibility that a relic density producing t~1{\tilde t}_1 can be %observed at the current experiments at the Tevatron is wide open.} The possibility that a t~1{\tilde t}_1 that can participate in coannihilation with the lightest neutralino to satisfy the WMAP bound on relic density and at the same time be observed at the current experiments at the Tevatron is wide open. At the LHC a large number of squark - gluino events lead to a very distinctive semi-inclusive signature τ±\tau^\pm+Xτ_\tau (anything without a tau lepton) with a characteristic size much larger than e±e^\pm+Xe_e or μ±\mu^\pm+Xμ_\mu events.Comment: Some minor changes made in the text. To appear in Phys Rev

    Distribution and Implications of Sponge Spicules in Surficial Deposits in Ohio

    Get PDF
    Author Institution: Agronomy Department, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OhioMicroscopic examination of biogenic opal isolated from the 0.05-0.02-mm total mineral fraction of 12 upland soil profiles indicates that fragments of sponge spicules are minor but ubiquitous constituents of Ohio soils, with major concentrations in the upper 10 to 15 inches of the profile. Quantities range from about 30 to 2000 parts per million biogenic opal or 1 to 65 parts per 10 million parts soil. Spicules are absent or extremely rare in calcareous Wisconsin-age till deposits. Their correlation with horizons high in silt content (50-75%), and their size and depth distribution in landscape positions which preclude an authigenic origin, indicate their aeolian transport from aquatic source areas with other loessial materials. Identification of spicules thus provides direct evidence that these horizons have been derived from loess or loess-till admixtures. This microscopic technique may serve useful for the identification of loess when field or laboratory particle-size analysis yields inconclusive evidence

    Analyzing Direct Dark Matter Detection Data by the AMIDAS Website

    Full text link
    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. 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 ~5% to < ~40% deviations from the input values.Comment: 12 pages, 8 eps figures, 1 table, to appear in the proceedings of the 3rd Workshop on Directional Detection of Dark Matter (CYGNUS 2011), June 7-10, 2011, Aussois, Franc

    Zeroing in on Supersymmetric Radiation Amplitude Zeros

    Full text link
    Radiation amplitude zeros have long been used to test the Standard Model. Here, we consider the supersymmetric radiation amplitude zero in chargino-neutralino associated production, which can be observed at the luminosity upgraded LHC. Such an amplitude zero only occurs if the neutralino has a large wino fraction and hence this observable can be used to determine the neutralino eigenstate content. We find that this observable can be measured by comparing the p_T spectrum of the softest lepton in the trilepton χ1±χ20\chi_1^\pm \chi_2^0 decay channel to that of a control process such as χ1+χ1\chi_1^+ \chi_1^- or χ20χ20\chi_2^0 \chi_2^0. We test this technique on a previously generated model sample of the 19 dimensional parameter space of the phenomenological MSSM, and find that it is effective in determining the wino content of the neutralino.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figure

    Effects of Residue Background Events in Direct Dark Matter Detection Experiments on the Determination of the WIMP Mass

    Full text link
    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

    Neutralino Dark Matter in Focus Point Supersymmetry

    Get PDF
    In recent work, it has been argued that multi-TeV masses for scalar superpartners are not unnatural. Indeed, they appear to have significant phenomenological virtues. Here we explore the implications of such `focus point' supersymmetry for the dark matter problem. We find that constraints on relic densities do not place upper bounds on neutralino or scalar masses. We demonstrate that, in the specific context of minimal supergravity, a cosmologically stable mixed gaugino-Higgsino state emerges as an excellent, robust dark matter candidate. We estimate that, over a wide range of the unknown parameters, the spin-independent proton-neutralino cross sections fall in the range accessible to planned search experiments.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures, version to appear in Phys. Lett. B. References added, minor modifications of Figs. 2 and 4 due to a bug (sign error) in neutdrive

    The development of experimental techniques for the study of helicopter rotor noise

    Get PDF
    The features of existing wind tunnels involved in noise studies are discussed. The acoustic characteristics of the MIT low noise open jet wind tunnel are obtained by employing calibration techniques: one technique is to measure the decay of sound pressure with distance in the far field; the other technique is to utilize a speaker, which was calibrated, as a sound source. The sound pressure level versus frequency was obtained in the wind tunnel chamber and compared with the corresponding calibrated values. Fiberglas board-block units were installed on the chamber interior. The free field was increased significantly after this treatment and the chamber cut-off frequency was reduced to 160 Hz from the original designed 250 Hz. The flow field characteristics of the rotor-tunnel configuration were studied by using flow visualization techniques. The influence of open-jet shear layer on the sound transmission was studied by using an Aeolian tone as the sound source. A dynamometer system was designed to measure the steady and low harmonics of the rotor thrust. A theoretical Mach number scaling formula was developed to scale the rotational noise and blade slap noise data of model rotors to full scale helicopter rotors
    corecore