47 research outputs found
The primordial deuterium abundance at z = 2.504 from a high signal-to-noise spectrum of Q1009+2956
The spectrum of the quasar Q1009+2956 has been observed
extensively on the Keck telescope. The Lyman limit absorption system was previously used to measure D/H by Burles & Tytler using a
spectrum with signal to noise approximately 60 per pixel in the continuum near
Ly {\alpha} at . The larger dataset now available combines
to form an exceptionally high signal to noise spectrum, around 147 per pixel.
Several heavy element absorption lines are detected in this LLS, providing
strong constraints on the kinematic structure. We explore a suite of absorption
system models and find that the deuterium feature is likely to be contaminated
by weak interloping Ly {\alpha} absorption from a low column density H I cloud,
reducing the expected D/H precision. We find D/H =
for this system. Combining this new
measurement with others from the literature and applying the method of Least
Trimmed Squares to a statistical sample of 15 D/H measurements results in a
"reliable" sample of 13 values. This sample yields a primordial deuterium
abundance of (D/H). The
corresponding mean baryonic density of the Universe is . The quasar absorption data is of the same precision as, and
marginally inconsistent with, the 2015 CMB Planck (TT+lowP+lensing)
measurement, . Further quasar and more
precise nuclear data are required to establish whether this is a random
fluctuation.Comment: accepted by MNRAS, 18 pages, 12 figures, 6 table
Primordial deuterium abundance at z=2.504 towards Q1009+2956
The z_abs = 2.504 Lyman Limit absorption system (LLS) towards Q1009+2956 has
previously been used to estimate the primordial deuterium abundance. Since the
initial measurement by Burles & Tytler, this quasar has been observed
extensively with the Keck telescope, providing a substantial increase in
signal-to-noise (from 60 to 147 at continuum level of Ly-alpha at z_abs=2.504).
We explore a set of different models for the absorption system and find that
the deuterium feature is contaminated by Ly-alpha absorption from a low column
density H I cloud. This significantly limits precision to which one can
estimate the D/H ratio in this LLS. Our final result for this system D/H
=2.48^{+0.41}_{-0.35}*10^{-5} has the same relative uncertainty of 17% as the
previous estimate by Burles & Tytler despite the far higher signal-to-noise of
our dataset. A weighted mean of 13 D/H measurements available in the literature
(including our result) gives the primordial deuterium abundance of (D/H)_p =
(2.545 +/- 0.025)*10^{-5} and the corresponding baryon density of the Universe
of Omega_b h^2 = 0.02174 +/- 0.00025 marginally inconsistent with the 2015
Planck CMB data.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, conference proceedings from PhysicA.SPb 201
Dark matter line emission constraints from NuSTAR observations of the Bullet Cluster
Line emission from dark matter is well motivated for some candidates e.g.
sterile neutrinos. We present the first search for dark matter line emission in
the 3-80keV range in a pointed observation of the Bullet Cluster with NuSTAR.
We do not detect any significant line emission and instead we derive upper
limits (95% CL) on the flux, and interpret these constraints in the context of
sterile neutrinos and more generic dark matter candidates. NuSTAR does not have
the sensitivity to constrain the recently claimed line detection at 3.5keV, but
improves on the constraints for energies of 10-25keV.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Ap
On the hadronic contribution to sterile neutrino production
Sterile neutrinos with masses in the keV range are considered to be a viable
candidate for warm dark matter. The rate of their production through
active-sterile neutrino transitions peaks, however, at temperatures of the
order of the QCD scale, which makes it difficult to estimate their relic
abundance quantitatively, even if the mass of the sterile neutrino and its
mixing angle were known. We derive here a relation, valid to all orders in the
strong coupling constant, which expresses the production rate in terms of the
spectral function associated with active neutrinos. The latter can in turn be
expressed as a certain convolution of the spectral functions related to various
mesonic current-current correlation functions, which are being actively studied
in other physics contexts. In the naive weak coupling limit, the appropriate
Boltzmann equations can be derived from our general formulae.Comment: 28 pages. v2: small clarifications added, published versio
Lightest sterile neutrino abundance within the nuMSM
We determine the abundance of the lightest (dark matter) sterile neutrinos
created in the Early Universe due to active-sterile neutrino transitions from
the thermal plasma. Our starting point is the field-theoretic formula for the
sterile neutrino production rate, derived in our previous work [JHEP
06(2006)053], which allows to systematically incorporate all relevant effects,
and also to analyse various hadronic uncertainties. Our numerical results
differ moderately from previous computations in the literature, and lead to an
absolute upper bound on the mixing angles of the dark matter sterile neutrino.
Comparing this bound with existing astrophysical X-ray constraints, we find
that the Dodelson-Widrow scenario, which proposes sterile neutrinos generated
by active-sterile neutrino transitions to be the sole source of dark matter, is
only possible for sterile neutrino masses lighter than 3.5 keV (6 keV if all
hadronic uncertainties are pushed in one direction and the most stringent X-ray
bounds are relaxed by a factor of two). This upper bound may conflict with a
lower bound from structure formation, but a definitive conclusion necessitates
numerical simulations with the non-equilibrium momentum distribution function
that we derive. If other production mechanisms are also operative, no upper
bound on the sterile neutrino mass can be established.Comment: 34 pages. v2: clarifications and a reference added; published
version. v3: erratum appende
Cosmological Simulations of Massive Compact High-z Galaxies
In order to investigate the structure and dynamics of the recently discovered
massive (M_* > 10^11 M_sun) compact z~2 galaxies, cosmological
hydrodynamical/N-body simulations of a proto-cluster region have been
undertaken. At z=2, the highest resolution simulation contains ~5800 resolved
galaxies, of which 509, 27 and 5 have M_* > 10^10 M_sun, > 10^11 M_sun and >
4x10^11 M_sun, respectively. Effective radii and characteristic stellar
densities have been determined for all galaxies. At z=2, for the definitely
well resolved mass range of M_* > 10^11 Msun, the mass-size relation is
consistent with observational findings for the most compact z~2 galaxies. The
very high velocity dispersion recently measured for a compact z~2 galaxy (~510
km/s; van Dokkum et al 2009) can be matched at about the 1-sigma level,
although a somewhat larger mass than the estimated M_* ~ 2 x 10^11 M_sun is
indicated. For the above mass range, the galaxies have an average axial ratio
= 0.64 +/- 0.02 with a dispersion of 0.1, an average rotation to 1D
velocity dispersion ratio = 0.46 +/- 0.06 with a dispersion of 0.3,
and a maximum value of v/sigma ~ 1.1. Rotation and velocity anisotropy both
contribute in flattening the compact galaxies. Some of the observed compact
galaxies appear flatter than any of the simulated galaxies. Finally, it is
found that the massive compact galaxies are strongly baryon dominated in their
inner parts, with typical dark matter mass fractions of order only 20% inside
of r=2R_eff.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, submitted to Ap
Constraining Sterile Neutrino Warm Dark Matter with Chandra Observations of the Andromeda Galaxy
We use the Chandra unresolved X-ray emission spectrum from a 12'-28' (2.8-6.4
kpc) annular region of the Andromeda galaxy to constrain the radiative decay of
sterile neutrino warm dark matter. By excising the most baryon-dominated,
central 2.8 kpc of the galaxy, we reduce the uncertainties in our estimate of
the dark matter mass within the field of view and improve the signal-to-noise
ratio of prospective sterile neutrino decay signatures relative to hot gas and
unresolved stellar emission. Our findings impose the most stringent limit on
the sterile neutrino mass to date in the context of the Dodelson-Widrow model,
m_s < 2.2 keV (95% C.L.). Our results also constrain alternative sterile
neutrino production scenarios at very small active-sterile neutrino mixing
angles.Comment: minor revisions, key results unchanged, accepted for publication in
JCA
Resolving the discrepancy between lensing and X-ray mass estimates of the complex galaxy cluster Abell 1689
There is a long-standing discrepancy between galaxy cluster masses determined
from X-ray and gravitational lensing observations of which Abell 1689 is a
well-studied example. In this work we take advantage of 180 ks of Chandra X-ray
observations and a new weak gravitational study based on a Hubble Space
Telescope mosaic covering the central 1.8 Mpc x 1.4 Mpc to eliminate the mass
discrepancy. In contrast to earlier X-ray analyses where the very circular
surface brightness has been inferred as Abell 1689 being spherically symmetric
and in hydrostatic equilibrium, a hardness ratio map analysis reveals a regular
and symmetric appearing main clump with a cool core plus some substructure in
the North Eastern part of the cluster. The gravitational lensing mass model
supports the interpretation of Abell 1689 being composed of a main clump, which
is possibly a virialized cluster, plus some substructure. In order to avoid
complications and mis-interpretations due to X-ray emission from the
substructure, we exclude it from the mass reconstruction. Comparing X-ray and
lensing mass profiles of the regular main part only, shows no significant
discrepancy between the two methods and the obtained mass profiles are
consistent over the full range where the mass can be reconstructed from X-rays
(out to approx. 1 Mpc). The obtained cluster mass within approx. 875 kpc
derived from X-rays alone is 6.4 plus/minus 2.1 x 10^14 solar masses compared
to a weak lensing mass of 8.6 plus/minus 3.0 x 10^14 solar masses within the
same radius.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figures, accepted by Ap
Do non-relativistic neutrinos constitute the dark matter?
The dark matter of the Abell 1689 galaxy cluster is modeled by thermal,
non-relativistic gravitating fermions and its galaxies and X-ray gas by
isothermal distributions. A fit yields a mass of 1.445 eV. A dark matter fraction
occurs for degrees
of freedom, i. e., for 3 families of left plus right handed neutrinos with
masses . Given a temperature of 0.045 K and a de
Broglie length of 0.20 mm, they establish a quantum structure of several
million light years across, the largest known in the Universe. The virial
-particle temperature of keV coincides with the
average one of X-rays. The results are compatible with neutrino genesis,
nucleosynthesis and free streaming. The neutrinos condense on the cluster at
redshift , thereby causing reionization of the intracluster gas
without assistance of heavy stars. The baryons are poor tracers of the dark
matter density.Comment: Extended published version, 6.1 pages, 2 figure
New experimental constraint on the W()W cross section
In this work, we present new data on the W() cross
sections, utilizing a quasi-monochromatic photon beam produced at the NewSUBARU
synchrotron radiation facility. Further, we have extracted the nuclear level
density and -ray strength function of W from data on the
W()W reaction measured at the Oslo
Cyclotron Laboratory. Combining previous measurements on the
W() cross section with our new W()
and ()W data sets, we have deduced the
W -ray strength function in the range of MeV
and MeV.
Our data are used to extract the level density and -ray strength
functions needed as input to the nuclear-reaction code \textsf{TALYS},
providing an indirect, experimental constraint for the
W()W cross section and reaction rate. Compared to the
recommended Maxwellian-averaged cross section (MACS) in the KADoNiS-1.0 data
base, our results are on average lower for the relevant energy range keV, and we provide a smaller uncertainty for the MACS. The
theoretical values of Bao \textit{et al.} and the cross section experimentally
constrained on photoneutron data of Sonnabend \textit{et al.} are significantly
higher than our result. The lower value by Mohr \textit{et al.} is in very good
agreement with our deduced MACS. Our new results could have implications for
the -process and in particular the predicted -process production of
Os nuclei.Comment: 17 pages, 15 figures; to be submitted to Phys. Rev.