945 research outputs found
Unresolved Unidentified Source Contribution to the Gamma-ray Background
The large majority of EGRET point sources remain without an identified
low-energy counterpart, and a large fraction of these sources are most likely
extragalactic. Whatever the nature of the extragalactic EGRET unidentified
sources, faint unresolved objects of the same class must have a contribution to
the diffuse extragalactic gamma-ray background (EGRB). Understanding this
component of the EGRB, along with other guaranteed contributions from known
sources, is essential if we are to use this emission to constrain exotic
high-energy physics. Here, we follow an empirical approach to estimate whether
a potential contribution of unidentified sources to the EGRB is likely to be
important, and we find that it is. Additionally, we show how upcoming GLAST
observations of EGRET unidentified sources, as well as of their fainter
counterparts, can be combined with GLAST observations of the Galactic and
extragalactic diffuse backgrounds to shed light on the nature of the EGRET
unidentified sources even without any positional association of such sources
with low-energy counterparts.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Ap
Nucleation of quark matter bubbles in neutron stars
The thermal nucleation of quark matter bubbles inside neutron stars is
examined for various temperatures which the star may realistically encounter
during its lifetime. It is found that for a bag constant less than a critical
value, a very large part of the star will be converted into the quark phase
within a fraction of a second. Depending on the equation of state for neutron
star matter and strange quark matter, all or some of the outer parts of the
star may subsequently be converted by a slower burning or a detonation.Comment: 13 pages, REVTeX, Phys.Rev.D (in press), IFA 93-32. 5 figures (not
included) available upon request from [email protected]
On Constraining Electroweak-Baryogenesis with Inhomogeneous Primordial Nucleosynthesis
Primordial nucleosynthesis calculations are shown to be able to provide
constraints on electroweak baryogenesis which produce a highly inhomogeneous
distribution of the baryon-to-photon ratio. Such baryogenesis scenarios
overproduce 4He and/or 7Li and can be ruled out whenever a fraction
f<3*10e-6(100 GeV/T)^3 of nucleated bubbles of broken-symmetry phase
contributes > 10% of the baryon number within the horizon volume.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures (figures available by email), UCRL-JC-11522
Curvature energy effects on strange quark matter nucleation at finite density
We consider the effects of the curvature energy term on thermal strange quark
matter nucleation in dense neutron matter. Lower bounds on the temperature at
which this process can take place are given and compared to those without the
curvature term.Comment: PlainTex, 6 pp., IAG-USP Rep.5
Q-balls in Underground Experiments
In this paper we present some features of Q-balls and we discuss their
interactions with matter, and their energy losses in the Earth, for a large
range of velocities. These calculations are used to compute the fractional
geometrical acceptance of the MACRO detector. Furthermore a systematic analysis
of the energy losses of Q-balls in three types of detectors is investigated.
More specifically we have computed the light yield in liquid scintillators, the
ionization in streamer tubes and the Restricted Energy Loss in the CR39 nuclear
track detectors.Comment: 7 pages, 4 PS figures included with epsfig, uses espcrc2.sty Talk
given at the Sixth Topical Seminar on Neutrino and Astroparticle Physics, San
Miniato, Italy, 17-21 May 199
The Pierre Auger Observatory: Results on Ultra-High Energy Cosmic Rays
The focus of this article is on recent results on ultra-high energy cosmic
rays obtained with the Pierre Auger Observatory. The world's largest instrument
of this type and its performance are described. The observations presented here
include the energy spectrum, the primary particle composition, limits on the
fluxes of photons and neutrinos and a discussion of the anisotropic
distribution of the arrival directions of the most energetic particles.
Finally, plans for the construction of a Northern Auger Observatory in
Colorado, USA, are discussed.Comment: Proceedings of the International Workshop on Advances in Cosmic Ray
Science, Waseda University, Shinjuku, Tokyo, Japan, March 2008; to be
published in the Journal of the Physical Society of Japan (JPSJ) supplemen
- âŠ