150 research outputs found
Strong Interactive Massive Particles from a Strong Coupled Theory
Minimal walking technicolor models can provide a nontrivial solution for
cosmological dark matter, if the lightest technibaryon is doubly charged.
Technibaryon asymmetry generated in the early Universe is related to baryon
asymmetry and it is possible to create excess of techniparticles with charge
(-2). These excessive techniparticles are all captured by , creating
\emph{techni-O-helium} ``atoms'', as soon as is formed in Big
Bang Nucleosynthesis. The interaction of techni-O-helium with nuclei opens new
paths to the creation of heavy nuclei in Big Bang Nucleosynthesis. Due to the
large mass of technibaryons, the ``atomic'' gas decouples from the
baryonic matter and plays the role of dark matter in large scale structure
formation, while structures in small scales are suppressed. Nuclear
interactions with matter slow down cosmic techni-O-helium in Earth below the
threshold of underground dark matter detectors, thus escaping severe CDMS
constraints. On the other hand, these nuclear interactions are not sufficiently
strong to exclude this form of Strongly Interactive Massive Particles by
constraints from the XQC experiment. Experimental tests of this hypothesis are
possible in search for in balloon-borne experiments (or on the ground)
and for its charged techniparticle constituents in cosmic rays and
accelerators. The ``atoms'' can cause cold nuclear transformations in
matter and might form anomalous isotopes, offering possible ways to exclude (or
prove?) their existence.Comment: 41 pages, 4 figure
Gamma-ray effects of dark forces in dark matter clumps
Existence of new gauge U(1) symmetry possessed by dark matter (DM) particles
implies the existence of a new Coulomb-like interaction, which leads to
Sommerfeld-Gamow-Sakharov enhancement of dark matter annihilation at low
relative velocities. We discuss a possibility to put constraints on the such
dark forces of dark matter from the observational data on the gamma radiation
in our Galaxy. Gamma-rays are supposed to originate from annihilation of DM
particles in the small scale clumps, in which annihilation rate is supposed to
be enhanced, besides higher density, due to smaller relative velocities of
DM particles. For possible cross sections, mass of annihilating particles,
masses of clumps and the contribution of annihilating particles in the total DM
density we constrain the strength of new dark long range forces from comparison
of predicted gamma ray signal with Fermi/LAT data on unidentified point-like
gamma-ray sources (PGS) as well as on diffuse -radiation.Comment: Accepted to Advances in High Energy Physics. arXiv admin note: text
overlap with arXiv:1212.608
Ultra cold neutron trap as a tool to search for dark matter with long-range radius of forces
The problem of possible application of an ultracold neutron (UCN) trap as a
detector of dark matter particles with long-range radius of forces has been
considered. Transmission of small recoil energy in scattering is a
characteristic of long-range forces. The main advantage of the ultracold
neutron technique lies in possibility of detecting recoil energy as small as
eV. Here are presented constraints on the interaction potential
parameters: for dark matter particles and
neutrons, as well as on the density value of long-range dark matter on the
Earth. The possible mechanism of accumulation of long-range dark matter on the
Earth surface is considered and the factor of density increase on the Earth
surface is evaluated. The results of the first experiment on search of
astronomical day variation of ultracold neutron storage time are under
discussion.Comment: 17 pages, 19 figures. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with
arXiv:1109.339
High Energy Positrons and Gamma Radiation from Decaying Constituents of a two-component Dark Atom Model
We study a two component dark matter candidate inspired by the Minimal
Walking Technicolor model. Dark matter consists of a dominant SIMP-like dark
atom component made of bound states between primordial helium nuclei and a
doubly charged technilepton, and a small WIMP-like component made of another
dark atom bound state between a doubly charged technibaryon and a technilepton.
This scenario is consistent with direct search experimental findings because
the dominant SIMP component interacts too strongly to reach the depths of
current detectors with sufficient energy to recoil and the WIMP-like component
is too small to cause significant amount of events. In this context a
metastable technibaryon that decays to , and can in principle explain the observed positron excess by AMS-02 and
PAMELA, while being consistent with the photon flux observed by FERMI/LAT. We
scan the parameters of the model and we find the best possible fit to the
latest experimental data. We find that there is a small range of parameter
space that this scenario can be realised under certain conditions regarding the
cosmic ray propagation and the final state radiation. This range of parameters
fall inside the region where the current run of LHC can probe, and therefore it
will soon be possible to either verify or exclude conclusively this model of
dark matter.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, invited contribution to the special issue
"Composite dark matter" of International Journal of Modern Physics D. arXiv
admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1411.365
On the classical description of the recombination of dark matter particles with a Coulomb-like interaction
Cold dark matter (DM) scenario may be cured of several problems by involving
self-interaction of dark matter. Viability of the models of long-range
interacting DM crucially depends on the effectiveness of recombination of the
DM particles, making thereby their interaction short-range. Usually in numeric
calculations, recombination is described by cross section obtained on a
feasible quantum level. However in a wide range of parameter values, a
classical treatment, where the particles are bound due to dipole radiation, is
applicable. The cross sections, obtained in both approaches, are very different
and lead to diverse consequences. Classical cross section has a steeper
dependence on relative velocity, what leads to the fact that, after decoupling
of DM particles from thermal background of "dark photons" (carriers of DM
long-range interaction), recombination process does not "freeze out",
diminishing gradually density of unbound DM particles. Our simplified estimates
show, that at the taken parameter values (the mass of DM particle is GeV,
interaction constant is , and quite natural assumptions on initial
conditions, from which the result is very weakly dependent) the difference in
residual density reaches about orders of magnitude on pre-galactic stage.
This estimate takes into account thermal effects induced by dipole radiation
and recombination, which resulted in the increase of both temperature and
density of DM particles by a half order of magnitude.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures. V3 has tiny corrections, matches published
versio
- …