129,350 research outputs found
Multi-Component Dark Matter
We explore multi-component dark matter models where the dark sector consists
of multiple stable states with different mass scales, and dark forces coupling
these states further enrich the dynamics. The multi-component nature of the
dark matter naturally arises in supersymmetric models, where both R parity and
an additional symmetry, such as a , is preserved. We focus on a particular
model where the heavier component of dark matter carries lepton number and
annihilates mostly to leptons. The heavier component, which is essentially a
sterile neutrino, naturally explains the PAMELA, ATIC and synchrotron signals,
without an excess in antiprotons which typically mars other models of weak
scale dark matter. The lighter component, which may have a mass from a GeV to a
TeV, may explain the DAMA signal, and may be visible in low threshold runs of
CDMS and XENON, which search for light dark matter.Comment: 4 pages, no figures. v2: paper shortened to letter length; modified
dark matter spectru
Icosahedral multi-component model sets
A quasiperiodic packing Q of interpenetrating copies of C, most of them only
partially occupied, can be defined in terms of the strip projection method for
any icosahedral cluster C. We show that in the case when the coordinates of the
vectors of C belong to the quadratic field Q[\sqrt{5}] the dimension of the
superspace can be reduced, namely, Q can be re-defined as a multi-component
model set by using a 6-dimensional superspace.Comment: 7 pages, LaTeX2e in IOP styl
Modulated decay in the multi-component Universe
The early Universe after inflation may have oscillations, kinations
(nonoscillatory evolution of a field), topological defects, relativistic and
non-relativistic particles at the same time. The Universe whose energy density
is a sum of those components can be called the multi-component Universe. The
components, which may have distinguishable density scalings, may decay
modulated. In this paper we study generation of the curvature perturbations
caused by the modulated decay in the multi-component Universe.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, added footnotes for calculational details,
accepted for publication in JCA
Structure of strongly coupled, multi-component plasmas
We investigate the short-range structure in strongly coupled fluidlike plasmas using the hypernetted chain approach generalized to multicomponent systems. Good agreement with numerical simulations validates this method for the parameters considered. We found a strong mutual impact on the spatial arrangement for systems with multiple ion species which is most clearly pronounced in the static structure factor. Quantum pseudopotentials were used to mimic diffraction and exchange effects in dense electron-ion systems. We demonstrate that the different kinds of pseudopotentials proposed lead to large differences in both the pair distributions and structure factors. Large discrepancies were also found in the predicted ion feature of the x-ray scattering signal, illustrating the need for comparison with full quantum calculations or experimental verification
Comparing various multi-component global heliosphere models
Modeling of the global heliosphere seeks to investigate the interaction of
the solar wind with the partially ionized local interstellar medium. Models
that treat neutral hydrogen self-consistently and in great detail, together
with the plasma, but that neglect magnetic fields, constitute a sub-category
within global heliospheric models. There are several different modeling
strategies used for this sub-category in the literature. Differences and
commonalities in the modeling results from different strategies are pointed
out. Plasma-only models and fully self-consistent models from four research
groups, for which the neutral species is modeled with either one, three, or
four fluids, or else kinetically, are run with the same boundary parameters and
equations. They are compared to each other with respect to the locations of key
heliospheric boundary locations and with respect to the neutral hydrogen
content throughout the heliosphere. In many respects, the models' predictions
are similar. In particular, the locations of the termination shock agree to
within 7% in the nose direction and to within 14% in the downwind direction.
The nose locations of the heliopause agree to within 5%. The filtration of
neutral hydrogen from the interstellar medium into the inner heliosphere,
however, is model dependent, as are other neutral results including the
hydrogen wall. These differences are closely linked to the strength of the
interstellar bow shock. The comparison also underlines that it is critical to
include neutral hydrogen into global heliospheric models.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, submitted to a special section at A&A of an ISSI
team "Determination of the physical Hydrogen parameters of the LIC from
within the Heliosphere
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