4,744 research outputs found
Indirect Detection of CMSSM Neutralino Dark Matter with Neutrino Telescopes
We review the prospects of detecting supersymmetric dark matter in the
framework of the Constrained Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model, and compare
indirect with direct detection capabilities.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, presented by J. Orloff at the York IDM02 workshop
(http://www.shef.ac.uk/~phys/idm2002
Neutrino Indirect Detection of Neutralino Dark Matter in the CMSSM
We study potential signals of neutralino dark matter indirect detection by
neutrino telescopes in a wide range of CMSSM parameters. We also compare with
direct detection potential signals taking into account in both cases present
and future experiment sensitivities. Only models with neutralino annihilation
into gauge bosons can satisfy cosmological constraints and current neutrino
indirect detection sensitivities. For both direct and indirect detection, only
next generation experiments will be able to really test this kind of models.Comment: 16 pages, 19 figures; v4: a few clarifications and significant
improvement of reference
First data from the ANTARES neutrino telescope
This contribution reviews the recent progress achieved towards building the ANTARES neutrino telescope. The first results obtained by the operation of a Mini Instrumentation Line with Optical Modules, "MILOM", and the first complete detector line are highlighted
Indirect detection of Dark Matter with the ANTARES Neutrino Telescope
Indirect search for Dark Matter trapped inside celestial bodies is one of the main physics goals of neutrino telescopes. The analysis performed with the data recorded by ANTARES in 2007 and 2008 to detect the ux of neutrinos originating from Dark Matter inside the Sun is reviewed. The obtained limits on the neutrino ux and on the WIMP-nucleon cross-sections are presented and compared to other existing limits from direct and indirect detection experiments as well as predictions from SUSY models such as the CMSSM and the more phenomenological MSSM-7 mode
Acoustic Signal Computations in the Mediterranean Sea
4 p.International audienceWe investigate various issues related to the thermacoustic signal computation from underwater cascades in a mediterranean sea environment and discuss their implications
The ESO-Sculptor Faint Galaxy Redshift Survey: The Photometric Sample
We present the photometric sample of a faint galaxy survey carried out in the
southern hemisphere, using CCDs on the 3.60m and NTT-3.5m telescopes at La
Silla (ESO). The survey area is a continuous strip of 0.2 deg x 1.53 deg
located at high galactic latitude (-83 deg) in the Sculptor constellation. The
photometric survey provides total magnitudes in the bands B, V (Johnson) and R
(Cousins) to limiting magnitudes of 24.5, 24.0, 23.5 respectively. To these
limits, the catalog contains about 9500, 12150, 13000 galaxies in B, V, R bands
respectively and is the first large digital multi-colour photometric catalog at
this depth. This photometric survey also provides the entry catalog for a
fully-sampled redshift survey of ~ 700 galaxies with R < 20.5 (Bellanger et al.
1995). In this paper, we describe the photometric observations and the steps
used in the data reduction. The analysis of objects and the star-galaxy
separation with a neural network are performed using SExtractor, a new
photometric software developed by E. Bertin (1996). The photometric accuracy of
the resulting catalog is ~ 0.05 mag for R < 22. The differential galaxy number
counts in B, V, R are in good agreement with previously published CCD studies
and confirm the evidence for significant evolution at faint magnitudes as
compared to a standard non evolving model (by factors 3.6, 2.6, 2.1). The
galaxy colour distributions B-R, B-V of our sample show a blueing trend of ~
0.5 mag between 21 < R < 23.5 in contrast to the V-R colour distribution where
no significant evolution is observed.Comment: LATEX, 18 Postscript figures, 20 pages. To appear July 1997. Modified
version of article. Abstract corrected for missing lin
High resolution simulations of unstable modes in a collisionless disc
We present N-body simulations of unstable spiral modes in a dynamically cool
collisionless disc. We show that spiral modes grow in a thin collisionless disk
in accordance with the analytical perturbation theory. We use the particle-mesh
code SUPERBOX with nested grids to follow the evolution of unstable spirals
that emerge from an unstable equilibrium state. We use a large number of
particles (up to 40 million particles) and high-resolution spatial grids in our
simulations (128^3 cells). These allow us to trace the dynamics of the unstable
spiral modes until their wave amplitudes are saturated due to nonlinear
effects. In general, the results of our simulations are in agreement with the
analytical predictions. The growth rate and the pattern speed of the most
unstable bar-mode measured in N-body simulations agree with the linear
analysis. However the parameters of secondary unstable modes are in lesser
agreement because of the still limited resolution of our simulations.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures in 22 files, A&A in print: Oct. 1st 200
Learning dislocation dynamics mobility laws from large-scale MD simulations
The computational method of discrete dislocation dynamics (DDD), used as a
coarse-grained model of true atomistic dynamics of lattice dislocations, has
become of powerful tool to study metal plasticity arising from the collective
behavior of dislocations. As a mesoscale approach, motion of dislocations in
the DDD model is prescribed via the mobility law; a function which specifies
how dislocation lines should respond to the driving force. However, the
development of traditional hand-crafted mobility laws can be a cumbersome task
and may involve detrimental simplifications. Here we introduce a
machine-learning (ML) framework to streamline the development of data-driven
mobility laws which are modeled as graph neural networks (GNN) trained on
large-scale Molecular Dynamics (MD) simulations of crystal plasticity. We
illustrate our approach on BCC tungsten and demonstrate that our GNN mobility
implemented in large-scale DDD simulations accurately reproduces the
challenging tension/compression asymmetry observed in ground-truth MD
simulations while correctly predicting the flow stress at lower straining rate
conditions unseen during training, thereby demonstrating the ability of our
method to learn relevant dislocation physics. Our DDD+ML approach opens new
promising avenues to improve fidelity of the DDD model and to incorporate more
complex dislocation motion behaviors in an automated way, providing a faithful
proxy for dislocation dynamics several orders of magnitude faster than
ground-truth MD simulations
Supernovae and their host galaxies - IV. The distribution of supernovae relative to spiral arms
Using a sample of 215 supernovae (SNe), we analyze their positions relative
to the spiral arms of their host galaxies, distinguishing grand-design (GD)
spirals from non-GD (NGD) galaxies. We find that: (1) in GD galaxies, an offset
exists between the positions of Ia and core-collapse (CC) SNe relative to the
peaks of arms, while in NGD galaxies the positions show no such shifts; (2) in
GD galaxies, the positions of CC SNe relative to the peaks of arms are
correlated with the radial distance from the galaxy nucleus. Inside (outside)
the corotation radius, CC SNe are found closer to the inner (outer) edge. No
such correlation is observed for SNe in NGD galaxies nor for SNe Ia in either
galaxy class; (3) in GD galaxies, SNe Ibc occur closer to the leading edges of
the arms than do SNe II, while in NGD galaxies they are more concentrated
towards the peaks of arms. In both samples of hosts, the distributions of SNe
Ia relative to the arms have broader wings. These observations suggest that
shocks in spiral arms of GD galaxies trigger star formation in the leading
edges of arms affecting the distributions of CC SNe (known to have short-lived
progenitors). The closer locations of SNe Ibc vs. SNe II relative to the
leading edges of the arms supports the belief that SNe Ibc have more massive
progenitors. SNe Ia having less massive and older progenitors, have more time
to drift away from the leading edge of the spiral arms.Comment: 19 pages, 10 figures, 11 tables, resubmitted to MNRAS after
addressing referee's comment
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