1,873 research outputs found
Compton Imaging of MeV Gamma-Rays with the Liquid Xenon Gamma-Ray Imaging Telescope (LXeGRIT)
The Liquid Xenon Gamma-Ray Imaging Telescope (LXeGRIT) is the first
realization of a liquid xenon time projection chamber for Compton imaging of
MeV gamma-ray sources in astrophysics. By measuring the energy deposit and the
three spatial coordinates of individual gamma-ray scattering points, the
location of the source in the sky is inferred with Compton kinematics
reconstruction. The angular resolution is determined by the detector's energy
and spatial resolutions, as well as by the separation in space between the
first and second scattering. The imaging response of LXeGRIT was established
with gamma-rays from radioactive sources, during calibration and integration at
the Columbia Astrophysics Laboratory, prior to the 2000 balloon flight mission.
In this paper we describe in detail the various steps involved in imaging
sources with LXeGRIT and present experimental results on angular resolution and
other parameters which characterize its performance as a Compton telescope.Comment: 22 pages, 20 figures, submitted to NIM
Sterile neutrino dark matter, CDMS-II and a light Higgs boson
We add a singlet right handed neutrino plus a charged and a neutral singlet
scalars to the standard model. This extension includes a discrete symmetry such
that we obtain a heavy sterile neutrino which couples only to the electron and
the new scalars. In this sense the singlet neutrino does not mix with ordinary
ones and thus has no effect on Big Bang Nucleosynthesis. However, such sterile
neutrino can be in equilibrium with electroweak particles in the early Universe
due to its couplings to electrons and also because the Higgs boson mixes with
the singlet scalars. We obtain that the sterile neutrino constitutes a dark
matter candidate and analyze its direct detection in the light of current
experiments. Our results show that if such a sterile neutrino is realized in
nature, and CDMS-II experiment confirms its positive signal, dark matter
demands a rather light Higgs boson with new Physics at some 500 GeV scale.Comment: 16 pages, 13 figures, uses axodraw.st
Design and Performance of the XENON10 Dark Matter Experiment
XENON10 is the first two-phase xenon time projection chamber (TPC) developed
within the XENON dark matter search program. The TPC, with an active liquid
xenon (LXe) mass of about 14 kg, was installed at the Gran Sasso underground
laboratory (LNGS) in Italy, and operated for more than one year, with excellent
stability and performance. Results from a dark matter search with XENON10 have
been published elsewhere. In this paper, we summarize the design and
performance of the detector and its subsystems, based on calibration data using
sources of gamma-rays and neutrons as well as background and Monte Carlo
simulations data. The results on the detector's energy threshold, energy and
position resolution, and overall efficiency show a performance that exceeds
design specifications, in view of the very low energy threshold achieved (<10
keVr) and the excellent energy resolution achieved by combining the ionization
and scintillation signals, detected simultaneously
Models of Holographic superconductivity
We construct general models for holographic superconductivity parametrized by
three couplings which are functions of a real scalar field and show that under
general assumptions they describe superconducting phase transitions. While some
features are universal and model independent, important aspects of the quantum
critical behavior strongly depend on the choice of couplings, such as the order
of the phase transition and critical exponents of second-order phase
transitions. In particular, we study a one-parameter model where the phase
transition changes from second to first order above some critical value of the
parameter and a model with tunable critical exponents.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figure
Local quasiparticle density of states of superconducting SmFeAsOF single crystals: Evidence for spin-mediated pairing
We probe the local quasiparticles density-of-states in micron-sized
SmFeAsOF single-crystals by means of Scanning Tunnelling
Spectroscopy. Spectral features resemble those of cuprates, particularly a
dip-hump-like structure developed at energies larger than the gap that can be
ascribed to the coupling of quasiparticles to a collective mode, quite likely a
resonant spin mode. The energy of the collective mode revealed in our study
decreases when the pairing strength increases. Our findings support
spin-fluctuation-mediated pairing in pnictides.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Discrete dark matter
We propose a new motivation for the stability of dark matter (DM). We suggest
that the same non-abelian discrete flavor symmetry which accounts for the
observed pattern of neutrino oscillations, spontaneously breaks to a Z2
subgroup which renders DM stable. The simplest scheme leads to a scalar doublet
DM potentially detectable in nuclear recoil experiments, inverse neutrino mass
hierarchy, hence a neutrinoless double beta decay rate accessible to upcoming
searches, while reactor angle equal to zero gives no CP violation in neutrino
oscillations.Comment: minor changes to match version accepted in PRD, one reference adde
Exotic fermion multiplets as a solution to baryon asymmetry, dark matter and neutrino masses
We propose an extension to the standard model where three exotic fermion
5-plets and one scalar 6-plet are added to the particle content. By demanding
that all interactions are renormalizable and standard model gauge invariant, we
show that the lightest exotic particle in this model can be a dark matter
candidate as long as the new 6-plet scalar does not develop a nonzero vacuum
expectation value. Furthermore, light neutrino masses are generated radiatively
at one-loop while the baryon asymmetry is produced by the CP-violating decays
of the second lightest exotic particle. We have demonstrated using concrete
examples that there is a parameter space where a consistent solution to the
problems of baryon asymmetry, dark matter and neutrino masses can be obtained.Comment: 17 pages, 2 figures (REVTeX4.1), v2: some refs added, v3: typos
corrected, Sec.VI.B, C modified, this version to appear in PR
The XENON project for dark matter direct detection at LNGS
The XENON project at INFN Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso, Italy, aims at dark matter direct detection with liquid xenon dual-phase time projection chambers. Latest results of XENON100 detector exclude various models of leptophilic dark matter. A search for low mass weakly interacting massive particles was also performed, lowering the energy threshold for detection to 0.7 keV for nuclear recoils. The multi-ton XENON1T detector is fully installed and operating. It is expected to reach a sensitivity a factor 100 better than XENON100 with a 2 ton·year exposure
Polaronic signature in the metallic phase of La0.7Ca0.3MnO3 films detected by scanning tunneling spectroscopy
In this work we map tunnel conductance curves with nanometric spatial
resolution, tracking polaronic quasiparticle excitations when cooling across
the insulator-to-metal transition in La0.7Ca0.3MnO3 films. In the insulating
phase the spectral signature of polarons, a depletion of conductance at low
bias flanked by peaks, is detected all over the scanned surface. These features
are still observed at the transition and persist on cooling into the metallic
phase. Polaron-binding energy maps reveal that polarons are not confined to
regions embedded in a highly-conducting matrix but are present over the whole
field of view both above and below the transition temperature.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Fingerprint of dynamical charge/spin correlations in the tunneling spectra of colossal magnetoresistive manganites
We present temperature-dependent scanning tunneling spectroscopy measurements
on () films with different degrees of biaxial
strain. A depletion in normalized conductance around the Fermi level is
observed both above and below the insulator-to-metal transition temperature
, for weakly as well as highly-strained films. This pseudogap-like
depletion globally narrows on cooling. The zero-bias conductance decreases on
cooling in the insulating phase, reaches a minimum close to and
increases on cooling in the metallic phase, following the trend of macroscopic
conductivity. These results support a recently proposed scenario in which
dynamical short-range antiferromagnetic/charge order correlations play a
preeminent role in the transport properties of colossal magnetoresistive
manganites [R. Yu \textit{et al}., Phys. Rev. B \textbf{77}, 214434 (2008)].Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
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