19 research outputs found

    Search for Axionlike and Scalar Particles with the NA64 Experiment

    Get PDF
    We carried out a model-independent search for light scalar (s) and pseudoscalar axionlike (a) particles that couple to two photons by using the high-energy CERN SPS H4 electron beam. The new particles, if they exist, could be produced through the Primakoff effect in interactions of hard bremsstrahlung photons generated by 100 GeV electrons in the NA64 active dump with virtual photons provided by the nuclei of the dump. The a(s) would penetrate the downstream HCAL module, serving as shielding, and would be observed either through their a(s)→γγa(s)\to\gamma \gamma decay in the rest of the HCAL detector or as events with large missing energy if the a(s) decays downstream of the HCAL. This method allows for the probing the a(s) parameter space, including those from generic axion models, inaccessible to previous experiments. No evidence of such processes has been found from the analysis of the data corresponding to 2.84×10112.84\times10^{11} electrons on target allowing to set new limits on the a(s)γγa(s)\gamma\gamma-coupling strength for a(s) masses below 55 MeV.Comment: This publication is dedicated to the memory of our colleague Danila Tlisov. 7 pages, 5 figures, revised version accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let

    Improved exclusion limit for light dark matter from e+e- annihilation in NA64

    Get PDF
    The current most stringent constraints for the existence of sub-GeV dark matter coupling to Standard Model via a massive vector boson Aâ€Č were set by the NA64 experiment for the mass region mAâ€Čâ‰Č250 MeV, by analyzing data from the interaction of 2.84×1011 100-GeV electrons with an active thick target and searching for missing-energy events. In this work, by including Aâ€Č production via secondary positron annihilation with atomic electrons, we extend these limits in the 200-300 MeV region by almost an order of magnitude, touching for the first time the dark matter relic density constrained parameter combinations. Our new results demonstrate the power of the resonant annihilation process in missing energy dark-matter searches, paving the road to future dedicated e+ beam efforts

    Search for pseudoscalar bosons decaying into e+e- pairs in the NA64 experiment at the CERN SPS

    Get PDF
    We report the results of a search for a light pseudoscalar particle a that couples to electrons and decays to e+e- performed using the high-energy CERN SPS H4 electron beam. If such light pseudoscalar exists, it could explain the ATOMKI anomaly (an excess of e+e- pairs in the nuclear transitions of Be8 and He4 nuclei at the invariant mass ≃17 MeV observed by the experiment at the 5 MV Van de Graaff accelerator at ATOMKI, Hungary). We used the NA64 data collected in the "visible mode"configuration with a total statistics corresponding to 8.4×1010 electrons on target (EOT) in 2017 and 2018. In order to increase sensitivity to small coupling parameter Ï” we also used the data collected in 2016-2018 in the "invisible mode"configuration of NA64 with a total statistics corresponding to 2.84×1011 EOT. The background and efficiency estimates for these two configurations were retained from our previous analyses searching for light vector bosons and axionlike particles (ALP) (the latter were assumed to couple predominantly to Îł). In this work we recalculate the signal yields, which are different due to different cross section and lifetime of a pseudoscalar particle a, and perform a new statistical analysis. As a result, the region of the two dimensional parameter space ma-Ï” in the mass range from 1 to 17.1 MeV is excluded. At the mass of the central value of the ATOMKI anomaly (the first result obtained on the beryllium nucleus, 16.7 MeV) the values of Ï” in the range 2.1×10-4<Ï”<3.2×10-4 are excluded

    ALP production through non-linear Compton scattering in intense fields

    Get PDF
    23 pages, 14 figuresWe derive production yields for massive pseudo-scalar and scalar axion-like-particles (ALPs), through non-linear Compton scattering of an electron in the background of low- and high-intensity electromagnetic fields. In particular, we focus on electromagnetic fields from Gaussian plane wave laser pulses. A detailed study of the angular distributions and effects of the scalar and pseudo-scalar masses is presented. It is shown that ultra-relativistic seed electrons can be used to produce scalars and pseudo-scalars with masses up to the order of the electron mass. We briefly discuss future applications of this work towards lab-based searches for light beyond-the-Standard-Model particles

    Formation of xenon clathrates in E. coli cell suspensions according to the data of the paramagnetic doping (n.m.r.) method

    No full text
    The pulsed n.m.r. method at the 90 MHz resonance frequency in the presence of paramagnetic Mn 2+ ions has been used to study the state of water in E. coli cell suspensions under a xenon pressure of 1 MPa at 279 K. It is shown that in these conditions xenon clathrates form in the extracellular medium with rise in the permeability of the cell membranes for water; with use of an isotonic extracellular medium the formation of clathrates leads to the compression and dehydration of the cells of the microorganism. © 1987

    Formation of xenon clathrates in E. coli cell suspensions according to the data of the paramagnetic doping (n.m.r.) method

    No full text
    The pulsed n.m.r. method at the 90 MHz resonance frequency in the presence of paramagnetic Mn 2+ ions has been used to study the state of water in E. coli cell suspensions under a xenon pressure of 1 MPa at 279 K. It is shown that in these conditions xenon clathrates form in the extracellular medium with rise in the permeability of the cell membranes for water; with use of an isotonic extracellular medium the formation of clathrates leads to the compression and dehydration of the cells of the microorganism. © 1987

    A Linear Bound on the K-Rendezvous Time for Primitive Sets of NZ Matrices

    No full text
    A set of nonnegative matrices is called primitive if there exists a product of these matrices that is entrywise positive. Motivated by recent results relating synchronizing automata and primitive sets, we study the length of the shortest product of a primitive set having a column or a row with k positive entries (the k-RT). We prove that this value is at most linear w.r.t. the matrix size n for small k, while the problem is still open for synchronizing automata. We then report numerical results comparing our upper bound on the k-RT with heuristic approximation methods

    Backbone resonance assignments of ferric human cytochrome c and the pro-apoptotic G41S mutant in the ferric and ferrous states

    No full text
    Human cytochrome c is a multi-functional protein with key roles in both the mitochondrial electron transfer chain and in apoptosis. In the latter, a complex formed between the mitochondrial phospholipid cardiolipin and cytochrome c is crucial for instigating the release of pro-apoptotic factors, including cytochrome c, from the mitochondrion into the cytosol. The G41S mutant of human cytochrome c is the only known disease-related variant of cytochrome c and causes increased apoptotic activity in patients with autosomal dominant thrombocytopenia. NMR spectroscopy can be used to investigate the interaction of human cytochrome c with cardiolipin and the structural and dynamic factors, which may contribute to enhanced apoptotic activity for the G41S mutant. We present here essentially full backbone amide resonance assignments for ferric human cytochrome c (98 %) as well as assignments of both the ferric (92 %) and ferrous (95 %) forms of the G41S mutant. Backbone amide chemical shift differences between the wild type and G41S mutant in the ferric state reveals significant changes around the mutation site, with many other amides also affected. This suggests the possibility of increased dynamics and/or a change in the paramagnetic susceptibility tensor of the G41S mutant relative to the wild type protein

    Improved limits on a hypothetical X (16.7) boson and a dark photon decaying into eâșe⁻ pairs

    Get PDF
    The improved results on a direct search for a new X ( 16.7     MeV ) boson that could explain the anomalous excess of e + e − pairs observed in the decays of the excited 8 Be ∗ nuclei (“Berillium or X17 anomaly”) are reported. Interestingly, new recent results in the nuclear transitions of another nucleus, 4 He , seems to support this anomaly spurring the need for an independent measurement. If the X boson exists, it could be produced in the bremsstrahlung reaction e\ud − Z → e − Z X by a high energy beam of electrons incident on the active target in the NA64 experiment at the CERN Super Proton Synchrotron and observed through its subsequent decay into e + e − pairs. No evidence for such decays was found from the combined analysis of the data samples with total statistics corresponding to 8.4 × 10 10 electrons on target collected in 2017 and 2018. This allows one to set new limits on the X − e − coupling in the range 1.2 × 10 − 4 â‰Č Δ e â‰Č 6.8 × 10 − 4 , excluding part of the parameter space favored by the X17 anomaly, and setting new bounds on the mixing strength of photons with dark photons ( A â€Č ) with a mass â‰Č 24     MeV . For the 2018 run, the setup was optimized to probe the region of parameter space characterized by a large coupling Δ . This allowed a significant improvement in sensitivity despite a relatively modest increase in statistics
    corecore