649 research outputs found
A Fresh Approach to Forecasting in Astroparticle Physics and Dark Matter Searches
We present a toolbox of new techniques and concepts for the efficient
forecasting of experimental sensitivities. These are applicable to a large
range of scenarios in (astro-)particle physics, and based on the Fisher
information formalism. Fisher information provides an answer to the question
what is the maximum extractable information from a given observation?. It is a
common tool for the forecasting of experimental sensitivities in many branches
of science, but rarely used in astroparticle physics or searches for particle
dark matter. After briefly reviewing the Fisher information matrix of general
Poisson likelihoods, we propose very compact expressions for estimating
expected exclusion and discovery limits (equivalent counts method). We
demonstrate by comparison with Monte Carlo results that they remain
surprisingly accurate even deep in the Poisson regime. We show how correlated
background systematics can be efficiently accounted for by a treatment based on
Gaussian random fields. Finally, we introduce the novel concept of Fisher
information flux. It can be thought of as a generalization of the commonly used
signal-to-noise ratio, while accounting for the non-local properties and
saturation effects of background and instrumental uncertainties. It is a
powerful and flexible tool ready to be used as core concept for informed
strategy development in astroparticle physics and searches for particle dark
matter.Comment: 33 pages, 12 figure
Convergence Acceleration via Combined Nonlinear-Condensation Transformations
A method of numerically evaluating slowly convergent monotone series is
described. First, we apply a condensation transformation due to Van Wijngaarden
to the original series. This transforms the original monotone series into an
alternating series. In the second step, the convergence of the transformed
series is accelerated with the help of suitable nonlinear sequence
transformations that are known to be particularly powerful for alternating
series. Some theoretical aspects of our approach are discussed. The efficiency,
numerical stability, and wide applicability of the combined
nonlinear-condensation transformation is illustrated by a number of examples.
We discuss the evaluation of special functions close to or on the boundary of
the circle of convergence, even in the vicinity of singularities. We also
consider a series of products of spherical Bessel functions, which serves as a
model for partial wave expansions occurring in quantum electrodynamic bound
state calculations.Comment: 24 pages, LaTeX, 12 tables (accepted for publication in Comput. Phys.
Comm.
Bayesian Model Comparison and Analysis of the Galactic Disk Population of Gamma-Ray Millisecond Pulsars
Pulsed emission from almost one hundred millisecond pulsars (MSPs) has been
detected in -rays by the Fermi Large-Area Telescope. The global
properties of this population remain relatively unconstrained despite many
attempts to model their spatial and luminosity distributions. We perform here a
self-consistent Bayesian analysis of both the spatial distribution and
luminosity function simultaneously. Distance uncertainties, arising from errors
in the parallax measurement or Galactic electron-density model, are
marginalized over. We provide a public Python package for calculating distance
uncertainties to pulsars derived using the dispersion measure by accounting for
the uncertainties in Galactic electron-density model YMW16. Finally, we use
multiple parameterizations for the MSP population and perform Bayesian model
comparison, finding that a broken power law luminosity function with Lorimer
spatial profile are preferred over multiple other parameterizations used in the
past. The best-fit spatial distribution and number of -ray MSPs is
consistent with results for the radio population of MSPs.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures, 3 tables + Appendix. Public code and source list
available from http://github.com/tedwards2412/MSPDis
CMB bounds on dark matter annihilation: Nucleon energy-losses after recombination
We consider the propagation and energy losses of protons and anti-protons
produced by dark matter annihilation at redshifts 100<z<~2000. In the case of
dark matter annihilations into quarks, gluons and weak gauge bosons, protons
and anti-protons carry about 20% of the energy injected into e^\pm and
\gamma's, but their interactions are normally neglected when deriving cosmic
microwave background bounds from altered recombination histories. Here, we
follow numerically the energy-loss history of typical protons/antiprotons in
the cosmological medium. We show that about half of their energy is channeled
into photons and e^\pm, and we present a simple prescription to estimate the
corresponding strengthening of the cosmic microwave background bounds on the
dark matter annihilation cross section.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. References added. Matches version published in
PR
A Unique Multi-Messenger Signal of QCD Axion Dark Matter
We propose a multi-messenger probe of QCD axion Dark Matter based on
observations of black hole-neutron star binary inspirals. It is suggested that
a dense Dark Matter spike may grow around intermediate mass black holes
(). The presence of such a spike produces
two unique effects: a distinct phase shift in the gravitational wave strain
during the inspiral and an enhancement of the radio emission due to the
resonant axion-photon conversion occurring in the neutron star magnetosphere
throughout the inspiral and merger. Remarkably, the observation of the
gravitational wave signal can be used to infer the Dark Matter density and,
consequently, to predict the radio emission. We study the projected reach of
the LISA interferometer and next-generation radio telescopes such as the Square
Kilometre Array. Given a sufficiently nearby system, such observations will
potentially allow for the detection of QCD axion Dark Matter in the mass range
to .Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Appendix added with additional figures. Updated
to published versio
Mathematical Properties of a New Levin-Type Sequence Transformation Introduced by \v{C}\'{\i}\v{z}ek, Zamastil, and Sk\'{a}la. I. Algebraic Theory
\v{C}\'{\i}\v{z}ek, Zamastil, and Sk\'{a}la [J. Math. Phys. \textbf{44}, 962
- 968 (2003)] introduced in connection with the summation of the divergent
perturbation expansion of the hydrogen atom in an external magnetic field a new
sequence transformation which uses as input data not only the elements of a
sequence of partial sums, but also explicit estimates
for the truncation errors. The explicit
incorporation of the information contained in the truncation error estimates
makes this and related transformations potentially much more powerful than for
instance Pad\'{e} approximants. Special cases of the new transformation are
sequence transformations introduced by Levin [Int. J. Comput. Math. B
\textbf{3}, 371 - 388 (1973)] and Weniger [Comput. Phys. Rep. \textbf{10}, 189
- 371 (1989), Sections 7 -9; Numer. Algor. \textbf{3}, 477 - 486 (1992)] and
also a variant of Richardson extrapolation [Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. London A
\textbf{226}, 299 - 349 (1927)]. The algebraic theory of these transformations
- explicit expressions, recurrence formulas, explicit expressions in the case
of special remainder estimates, and asymptotic order estimates satisfied by
rational approximants to power series - is formulated in terms of hitherto
unknown mathematical properties of the new transformation introduced by
\v{C}\'{\i}\v{z}ek, Zamastil, and Sk\'{a}la. This leads to a considerable
formal simplification and unification.Comment: 41 + ii pages, LaTeX2e, 0 figures. Submitted to Journal of
Mathematical Physic
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