2,316 research outputs found

    Detection and measurement of planetary systems with GAIA

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    We use detailed numerical simulations and the Ï…\upsilon Andromedae, planetary system as a template to evaluate the capability of the ESA Cornerstone Mission GAIA in detecting and measuring multiple planets around solar-type stars in the neighborhood of the Solar System. For the outer two planets of the Ï…\upsilon Andromedae, system, GAIA high-precision global astrometric measurements would provide estimates of the full set of orbital elements and masses accurate to better than 1--10%, and would be capable of addressing the coplanarity issue by determining the true geometry of the system with uncertainties of order of a few degrees. Finally, we discuss the generalization to a variety of configurations of potential planetary systems in the solar neighborhood for which GAIA could provide accurate measurements of unique value for the science of extra-solar planets.Comment: 4 pages, 2 pictures, accepted for publication in A&A Letter

    Connecting neutrino physics with dark matter

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    The origin of neutrino masses and the nature of dark matter are two of the most pressing open questions of the modern astro-particle physics. We consider here the possibility that these two problems are related, and review some theoretical scenarios which offer common solutions. A simple possibility is that the dark matter particle emerges in minimal realizations of the see-saw mechanism, like in the majoron and sterile neutrino scenarios. We present the theoretical motivation for both models and discuss their phenomenology, confronting the predictions of these scenarios with cosmological and astrophysical observations. Finally, we discuss the possibility that the stability of dark matter originates from a flavour symmetry of the leptonic sector. We review a proposal based on an A_4 flavour symmetry.Comment: 21 pages, 4 figures. Review prepared for the focus issue on "Neutrino Physics". Matches published versio

    Can the WIMP annihilation boost factor be boosted by the Sommerfeld enhancement?

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    We demonstrate that the Sommerfeld correction to CDM annihilations can be appreciable if even a small component of the dark matter is extremely cold. Subhalo substructure provides such a possibility given that the smallest clumps are relatively cold and contain even colder substructure due to incomplete phase space mixing. Leptonic channels can be enhanced for plausible models and the solar neighbourhood boost required to account for PAMELA/ATIC data is plausibly obtained, especially in the case of a few TeV mass neutralino for which the Sommerfeld-corrected boost is found to be ∼104−105.\sim10^4-10^5. Saturation of the Sommerfeld effect is shown to occur below β∼10−4,\beta\sim 10^{-4}, thereby constraining the range of contributing substructures to be above ∼105M⊙.\sim 10^5\rm M_\odot. We find that the associated diffuse gamma ray signal from annihilations would exceed EGRET constraints unless the channels annihilating to heavy quarks or to gauge bosons are suppressed. The lepton channel gamma rays are potentially detectable by the FERMI satellite, not from the inner galaxy where substructures are tidally disrupted, but rather as a quasi-isotropic background from the outer halo, unless the outer substructures are much less concentrated than the inner substructures and/or the CDM density profile out to the virial radius steepens significantly.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures. References added. Replaced to match published versio

    Decaying warm dark matter and neutrino masses

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    Neutrino masses may arise from spontaneous breaking of ungauged lepton number. Due to quantum gravity effects the associated Goldstone boson - the majoron - will pick up a mass. We determine the lifetime and mass required by cosmic microwave background observations so that the massive majoron provides the observed dark matter of the Universe. The majoron DDM scenario fits nicely in models where neutrino masses arise a la seesaw, and may lead to other possible cosmological implications.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Replaced to match published version. Minor changes made to address referees' comments. References adde

    The Evens and Odds of CMB Anomalies

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    The lack of power of large--angle CMB anisotropies is known to increase its statistical significance at higher Galactic latitudes, where a string--inspired pre--inflationary scale Δ\Delta can also be detected. Considering the Planck 2015 data, and relying largely on a Bayesian approach, we show that the effect is mostly driven by the \emph{even}--ℓ\ell harmonic multipoles with ℓ≲20\ell \lesssim 20, which appear sizably suppressed in a way that is robust with respect to Galactic masking, along with the corresponding detections of Δ\Delta. On the other hand, the first \emph{odd}--ℓ\ell multipoles are only suppressed at high Galactic latitudes. We investigate this behavior in different sky masks, constraining Δ\Delta through even and odd multipoles, and we elaborate on possible implications. We include low--ℓ\ell polarization data which, despite being noise--limited, help in attaining confidence levels of about 3 σ\sigma in the detection of Δ\Delta. We also show by direct forecasts that a future all--sky EE--mode cosmic--variance--limited polarization survey may push the constraining power for Δ\Delta beyond 5 σ\sigma.Comment: 49 pages, 19 figures. Figures and final discussion simplified, references added. Final version to appear in Physics of the Dark Univers
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