835 research outputs found
Gravitational microlensing and dark matter in the galactic halo
We present the basics of microlensing and give an overview of the results
obtained so far. We also describe a scenario in which dark clusters of MACHOs
(Massive Astrophysical Compact Halo Objects) and cold molecular clouds (mainly
of ) naturally form in the halo at galactocentric distances larger than
10-20 kpc. Moreover, we discuss various experimental tests of this picture in
particular a -ray emission from the clouds due to the scattering of
high-energy cosmic-ray protons. Our estimate for the -ray flux turns
out to be in remarkably good agreement with the recent discovery by Dixon et
al. of a possible -ray emission from the halo using EGRET data.Comment: 14 pages, to appear in the proceedings of the 3K Cosmology Conference
(Rome, october 1998), added references and minor change
Dark matter and gamma rays from the galactic halo
The nature of the dark matter in the halo of our Galaxy is still largely
unknown. The microlensing events found so far towards the Large Magellanic
Cloud suggest that at most about 20% of the halo dark matter is in the form of
MACHOs (Massive Astrophysical Compact Halo Objects). The dark matter could
also, at least partially, consist of cold molecular clouds (mainly ).
Another possibility is that WIMPs (Weakly Interacting Massive Particles) make
up the dark matter and that, due to annihilition processes, they show up
through gamma-ray emission.Comment: 6 pages talk given at XXXI International Symposium on Multiparticle
Dynamics, Sep. 1-7, 2001, Datong China URL http://ismd31.ccnu.edu.cn
Josephson junctions and dark energy
In a recent paper Beck and Mackey [astro-ph/0603397] argue that the argument
we gave in our paper [Phys. Lett. B 606, 77 (2005)] to disprove their claim
that dark energy can be discovered in the Lab through noise measurements of
Josephson junctions is incorrect. In particular, they emphasize that the
measured noise spectrum in Josephson junctions is a consequence of the
fluctuation dissipation theorem, while our argument was based on equilibrium
statistical mechanics. In this note we show that the fluctuation dissipation
relation does not depend upon any shift of vacuum (zero-point) energies, and
therefore, as already concluded in our previous paper, dark energy has nothing
to do with the proposed measurements.Comment: 4 page
On the 1/c Expansion of f(R) Gravity
We derive for applications to isolated systems - on the scale of the Solar
System - the first relativistic terms in the expansion of the space time
metric for metric gravity theories, where is assumed to
be analytic at . For our purpose it suffices to take into account up to
quadratic terms in the expansion of , thus we can approximate with a positive dimensional parameter . In the non-relativistic limit,
we get an additional Yukawa correction with coupling strength and Compton
wave length to the Newtonian potential, which is a known result in
the literature. As an application, we derive to the same order the correction
to the geodetic precession of a gyroscope in a gravitational field and the
precession of binary pulsars. The result of the Gravity Probe B experiment
yields the limit , whereas for the
pulsar B in the PSR J0737-3039 system we get a bound which is about
times larger. On the other hand the E\"ot-Wash experiment provides the best
laboratory bound . Although the former
bounds from geodesic precession are much larger than the laboratory ones, they
are still meaningful in the case some type of chameleon effect is present and
thus the effective values could be different at different length scales.Comment: 11 pages, accepted for publication in Physical Review
Spin effects in the phasing of gravitational waves from binaries on eccentric orbits
We compute here the spin-orbit and spin-spin couplings needed for an accurate
computation of the phasing of gravitational waves emitted by comparable-mass
binaries on eccentric orbits at the second post-Newtonian (PN) order. We use a
quasi-Keplerian parametrization of the orbit free of divergencies in the zero
eccentricity limit. We find that spin-spin couplings induce a residual
eccentricity for coalescing binaries at 2PN, of the order of
- for supermassive black hole binaries in the LISA band.
Spin-orbit precession also induces a non-trivial pattern in the evolution of
the eccentricity, which could help to reduce the errors on the determination of
the eccentricity and spins in a gravitational wave measurement.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure; Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
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