15
views
0
recommends
+1 Recommend
0 collections
    0
    shares
      • Record: found
      • Abstract: not found
      • Article: not found

      Constraints on Scattering of keV–TeV Dark Matter with Protons in the Early Universe

      ,
      Physical Review Letters
      American Physical Society (APS)

      Read this article at

      ScienceOpenPublisher
      Bookmark
          There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.

          Related collections

          Most cited references39

          • Record: found
          • Abstract: found
          • Article: found
          Is Open Access

          Supersymmetric Dark Matter

          There is almost universal agreement among astronomers that most of the mass in the Universe and most of the mass in the Galactic halo is dark. Many lines of reasoning suggest that the dark matter consists of some new, as yet undiscovered, weakly-interacting massive particle (WIMP). There is now a vast experimental effort being surmounted to detect WIMPS in the halo. The most promising techniques involve direct detection in low-background laboratory detectors and indirect detection through observation of energetic neutrinos from annihilation of WIMPs that have accumulated in the Sun and/or the Earth. Of the many WIMP candidates, perhaps the best motivated and certainly the most theoretically developed is the neutralino, the lightest superpartner in many supersymmetric theories. We review the minimal supersymmetric extension of the Standard Model and discuss prospects for detection of neutralino dark matter. We review in detail how to calculate the cosmological abundance of the neutralino and the event rates for both direct- and indirect-detection schemes, and we discuss astrophysical and laboratory constraints on supersymmetric models. We isolate and clarify the uncertainties from particle physics, nuclear physics, and astrophysics that enter at each step in the calculation. We briefly review other related dark-matter candidates and detection techniques.
            Bookmark
            • Record: found
            • Abstract: found
            • Article: found
            Is Open Access

            MultiNest: an efficient and robust Bayesian inference tool for cosmology and particle physics

            We present further development and the first public release of our multimodal nested sampling algorithm, called MultiNest. This Bayesian inference tool calculates the evidence, with an associated error estimate, and produces posterior samples from distributions that may contain multiple modes and pronounced (curving) degeneracies in high dimensions. The developments presented here lead to further substantial improvements in sampling efficiency and robustness, as compared to the original algorithm presented in Feroz & Hobson (2008), which itself significantly outperformed existing MCMC techniques in a wide range of astrophysical inference problems. The accuracy and economy of the MultiNest algorithm is demonstrated by application to two toy problems and to a cosmological inference problem focussing on the extension of the vanilla \(\Lambda\)CDM model to include spatial curvature and a varying equation of state for dark energy. The MultiNest software, which is fully parallelized using MPI and includes an interface to CosmoMC, is available at http://www.mrao.cam.ac.uk/software/multinest/. It will also be released as part of the SuperBayeS package, for the analysis of supersymmetric theories of particle physics, at http://www.superbayes.org
              Bookmark
              • Record: found
              • Abstract: found
              • Article: found
              Is Open Access

              First Dark Matter Search Results from the XENON1T Experiment

              We report the first dark matter search results from XENON1T, a \(\sim\)2000-kg-target-mass dual-phase (liquid-gas) xenon time projection chamber in operation at the Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso in Italy and the first ton-scale detector of this kind. The blinded search used 34.2 live days of data acquired between November 2016 and January 2017. Inside the (1042\(\pm\)12) kg fiducial mass and in the [5, 40] \(\mathrm{keV}_{\mathrm{nr}}\) energy range of interest for WIMP dark matter searches, the electronic recoil background was \((1.93 \pm 0.25) \times 10^{-4}\) events/(kg \(\times\) day \(\times \mathrm{keV}_{\mathrm{ee}}\)), the lowest ever achieved in a dark matter detector. A profile likelihood analysis shows that the data is consistent with the background-only hypothesis. We derive the most stringent exclusion limits on the spin-independent WIMP-nucleon interaction cross section for WIMP masses above 10 GeV/c\({}^2\), with a minimum of 7.7 \(\times 10^{-47}\) cm\({}^2\) for 35-GeV/c\({}^2\) WIMPs at 90% confidence level.
                Bookmark

                Author and article information

                Journal
                PRLTAO
                Physical Review Letters
                Phys. Rev. Lett.
                American Physical Society (APS)
                0031-9007
                1079-7114
                August 2018
                August 20 2018
                : 121
                : 8
                Article
                10.1103/PhysRevLett.121.081301
                402070b2-a025-45c3-a222-5cc8c172ea2e
                © 2018

                https://link.aps.org/licenses/aps-default-license

                History

                Comments

                Comment on this article