509 research outputs found
The galactic antiproton spectrum at high energies: background expectation vs. exotic contributions
A new generation of upcoming space-based experiments will soon start to probe
the spectrum of cosmic ray antiparticles with an unprecedented accuracy and, in
particular, will open up a window to energies much higher than those accessible
so far. It is thus timely to carefully investigate the expected antiparticle
fluxes at high energies. Here, we perform such an analysis for the case of
antiprotons. We consider both standard sources as the collision of other cosmic
rays with interstellar matter, as well as exotic contributions from dark matter
annihilations in the galactic halo. Up to energies well above 100 GeV, we find
that the background flux in antiprotons is almost uniquely determined by the
existing low-energy data on various cosmic ray species; for even higher
energies, however, the uncertainties in the parameters of the underlying
propagation model eventually become significant. We also show that if the dark
matter is composed of particles with masses at the TeV scale, which is
naturally expected in extra-dimensional models as well as in certain parameter
regions of supersymmetric models, the annihilation flux can become comparable
to - or even dominate - the antiproton background at the high energies
considered here.Comment: 17 pages revtex4, 7 figures; minor changes (to match the published
version
Propagation of the phase of solar modulation
The phase of the 11 year galactic cosmic ray variation, due to a varying rate of emission of long lived propagating regions of enhanced scattering, travels faster than the scattering regions themselves. The radial speed of the 11 year phase in the quasi-steady, force field approximation is exactly twice the speed of the individual, episodic decreases. A time dependent, numerical solution for 1 GeV protons at 1 and 30 Au gives a phase speed which is 1.85 times the propagation speed of the individual decreases
An asymptotic formula for marginal running coupling constants and universality of loglog corrections
Given a two-loop beta function for multiple marginal coupling constants, we
derive an asymptotic formula for the running coupling constants driven to an
infrared fixed point. It can play an important role in universal loglog
corrections to physical quantities.Comment: 16 pages; typos fixed, one appendix removed for quick access to the
main result; to be published in J. Phys.
Simulation of neutrino and charged particle production and propagation in the atmosphere
A precise evaluation of the secondary particle production and propagation in
the atmosphere is very important for the atmospheric neutrino oscillation
studies. The issue is addressed with the extension of a previously developed
full 3-Dimensional Monte-Carlo simulation of particle generation and transport
in the atmosphere, to compute the flux of secondary protons, muons and
neutrinos. Recent balloon borne experiments have performed a set of accurate
flux measurements for different particle species at different altitudes in the
atmosphere, which can be used to test the calculations for the atmospheric
neutrino production, and constrain the underlying hadronic models. The
simulation results are reported and compared with the latest flux measurements.
It is shown that the level of precision reached by these experiments could be
used to constrain the nuclear models used in the simulation. The implication of
these results for the atmospheric neutrino flux calculation are discussed.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figure
Illuminating dark matter and primordial black holes with interstellar antiprotons
Interstellar antiproton fluxes can arise from dark matter annihilating or
decaying into quarks or gluons that subsequently fragment into antiprotons.
Evaporation of primordial black holes also can produce a significant antiproton
cosmic-ray flux. Since the background of secondary antiprotons from spallation
has an interstellar energy spectrum that peaks at \sim 2\gev and falls
rapidly for energies below this, low-energy measurements of cosmic antiprotons
are useful in the search for exotic antiproton sources. However, measurement of
the flux near the earth is challenged by significant uncertainties from the
effects of the solar wind. We suggest evading this problem and more effectively
probing dark-matter signals by placing an antiproton spectrometer aboard an
interstellar probe currently under discussion. We address the experimental
challenges of a light, low-power-consuming detector, and present an initial
design of such an instrument. This experimental effort could significantly
increase our ability to detect, and have confidence in, a signal of exotic,
nonstandard antiproton sources. Furthermore, solar modulation effects in the
heliosphere would be better quantified and understood by comparing results to
inverse modulated data derived from existing balloon and space-based detectors
near the earth.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figure
Positrons in Cosmic Rays from Dark Matter Annihilations for Uplifted Higgs Regions in MSSM
We point out that there are regions in the MSSM parameter space which
successfully provide a dark matter (DM) annihilation explanation for observed
positron excess (e.g. PAMELA), while still remaining in agreement with all
other data sets. Such regions (e.g. the uplifted Higgs region) can realize an
enhanced neutralino DM annihilation dominantly into leptons via a Breit-Wigner
resonance through the CP-odd Higgs channel. Such regions can give the proper
thermal relic DM abundance, and the DM annihilation products are compatible
with current antiproton and gamma ray observations. This scenario can succeed
without introducing any additional degrees of freedom beyond those already in
the MSSM.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figure
Antimatter cosmic rays from dark matter annihilation: First results from an N-body experiment
[Abridged]. We take advantage of the galaxy-like 3D dark matter map extracted
from the HORIZON Project results to calculate the positron and antiproton
fluxes from dark matter annihilation, in a model-independent approach as well
as for dark matter particle benchmarks relevant at the LHC scale (from
supersymmetric and extra-dimensional theories). Such a study is dedicated to a
better estimate of the theoretical uncertainties affecting predictions, while
the PAMELA and GLAST satellites are currently taking data which will soon
provide better observational constraints. We discuss the predictions of the
antiproton and positron fluxes, and of the positron fraction as well, as
compared to the current data. We finally discuss the limits of the Nbody
framework in describing the dark matter halo of our Galaxy.Comment: 19 pages, 9 figures. Backgrounds included and additional comments and
figures on the positron fraction. Accepted for publication in PR
Contextual Object Detection with a Few Relevant Neighbors
A natural way to improve the detection of objects is to consider the
contextual constraints imposed by the detection of additional objects in a
given scene. In this work, we exploit the spatial relations between objects in
order to improve detection capacity, as well as analyze various properties of
the contextual object detection problem. To precisely calculate context-based
probabilities of objects, we developed a model that examines the interactions
between objects in an exact probabilistic setting, in contrast to previous
methods that typically utilize approximations based on pairwise interactions.
Such a scheme is facilitated by the realistic assumption that the existence of
an object in any given location is influenced by only few informative locations
in space. Based on this assumption, we suggest a method for identifying these
relevant locations and integrating them into a mostly exact calculation of
probability based on their raw detector responses. This scheme is shown to
improve detection results and provides unique insights about the process of
contextual inference for object detection. We show that it is generally
difficult to learn that a particular object reduces the probability of another,
and that in cases when the context and detector strongly disagree this learning
becomes virtually impossible for the purposes of improving the results of an
object detector. Finally, we demonstrate improved detection results through use
of our approach as applied to the PASCAL VOC and COCO datasets
Zero Field precession and hysteretic threshold currents in spin torque oscillators with tilted polarizer
Using non-linear system theory and numerical simulations we map out the
static and dynamic phase diagram in zero applied field of a spin torque
oscillator with a tilted polarizer (TP-STO).We find that for sufficiently large
currents, even very small tilt angles (beta>1 degree) will lead to steady free
layer precession in zero field. Within a rather large range of tilt angles, 1
degree< beta <19 degree, we find coexisting static states and hysteretic
switching between these using only current. In a more narrow window (1
degree<beta<5 degree) one of the static states turns into a limit cycle
(precession). The coexistence of static and dynamic states in zero magnetic
field is unique to the tilted polarizer and leads to large hysteresis in the
upper and lower threshold currents for TP-STO operation.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Low-lying bifurcations in cavity quantum electrodynamics
The interplay of quantum fluctuations with nonlinear dynamics is a central
topic in the study of open quantum systems, connected to fundamental issues
(such as decoherence and the quantum-classical transition) and practical
applications (such as coherent information processing and the development of
mesoscopic sensors/amplifiers). With this context in mind, we here present a
computational study of some elementary bifurcations that occur in a driven and
damped cavity quantum electrodynamics (cavity QED) model at low intracavity
photon number. In particular, we utilize the single-atom cavity QED Master
Equation and associated Stochastic Schrodinger Equations to characterize the
equilibrium distribution and dynamical behavior of the quantized intracavity
optical field in parameter regimes near points in the semiclassical
(mean-field, Maxwell-Bloch) bifurcation set. Our numerical results show that
the semiclassical limit sets are qualitatively preserved in the quantum
stationary states, although quantum fluctuations apparently induce phase
diffusion within periodic orbits and stochastic transitions between attractors.
We restrict our attention to an experimentally realistic parameter regime.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figures, submitted to PR
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