Dissertations / Theses on the topic 'Dark Matter - Astroparticle Physics'
Create a spot-on reference in APA, MLA, Chicago, Harvard, and other styles
Consult the top 50 dissertations / theses for your research on the topic 'Dark Matter - Astroparticle Physics.'
Next to every source in the list of references, there is an 'Add to bibliography' button. Press on it, and we will generate automatically the bibliographic reference to the chosen work in the citation style you need: APA, MLA, Harvard, Chicago, Vancouver, etc.
You can also download the full text of the academic publication as pdf and read online its abstract whenever available in the metadata.
Browse dissertations / theses on a wide variety of disciplines and organise your bibliography correctly.
Sivertsson, Sofia. "Dark matter in and around stars." Licentiate thesis, Stockholm : Skolan för teknikvetenskap, Kungliga Tekniska högskolan, 2009. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-11259.
Full textBurgess, Thomas. "A Search for Solar Neutralino Dark Matter with the AMANDA-II Neutrino Telescope." Doctoral thesis, Stockholm : Physics Department, Stockholm University, 2008. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-7378.
Full textKahlhoefer, Felix Karl David. "Complementarity of searches for dark matter." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2014. http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:ec5b1afe-b75c-44d9-9dad-e0d342e46fa1.
Full textBuchholz, Annika [Verfasser]. "Various Aspects of Astroparticle Physics and the Implications for Dark Matter Searches / Annika Buchholz." Bonn : Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek Bonn, 2020. http://d-nb.info/1218301287/34.
Full textScott, Pat. "Searches for Particle Dark Matter Dark stars, dark galaxies, dark halos and global supersymmetric fits /." Doctoral thesis, Stockholm : Department of Physics, Stockholm University, 2010. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-38221.
Full textAt the time of the doctoral defense, the following papers were unpublished and had a status as follows: Paper 5: Accepted. Paper 6: Submitted. Härtill 6 uppsatser.
Lundström, Erik. "Phenomenology of Inert Scalar and Supersymmetric Dark Matter." Doctoral thesis, Stockholms universitet, Fysikum, 2010. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-39278.
Full textWikström, Gustav. "A search for solar dark matter with the IceCube neutrino telescope." Doctoral thesis, Stockholms universitet, Fysikum, 2009. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-27352.
Full textFour articles are appended to the thesis:I. G. Wikström for the IceCube collaboration, Proc. of the 30th ICRC,arXiv/0711.0353 [astro-ph] (2007) 135.II. A. Gross, C. Ha, C. Rott, M. Tluczykont, E. Resconi, T. DeYoung and G. Wikström for the IceCube Collaboration, Proc. of the 30th ICRC,arXiv/0711.0353 [astro-ph] (2007) 11.III. G. Wikström and J. Edsjö, JCAP 04 (2009) 009.IV. R. Abbasi et al. (IceCube collaboration), accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Lett., arXiv/0902.2460v3 [astro-ph.CO] (2009).
IceCube
Akrami, Yashar. "Supersymmetry vis-à-vis Observation : Dark Matter Constraints, Global Fits and Statistical Issues." Doctoral thesis, Stockholms universitet, Fysikum, 2011. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-57194.
Full textAt the time of the doctoral defense, the following paper was unpublished and had a status as follows: Paper 4: Submitted.
Ylinen, Tomi. "Search for Gamma-ray Lines from Dark Matter with the Fermi Large Area Telescope." Doctoral thesis, KTH, Partikel- och astropartikelfysik, 2010. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-12853.
Full textQC20100525
GLAST
Sellerholm, Alexander. "Cosmological dark matter and the isotropic gamma-ray background measurements and upper limits /." Doctoral thesis, Stockholm : Department of Physics, Stockholm University, 2010. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-38900.
Full textWechakama, Maneenate. "Multi-messenger constraints and pressure from dark matter annihilation into electron-positron pairs." Phd thesis, Universität Potsdam, 2013. http://opus.kobv.de/ubp/volltexte/2013/6740/.
Full textTrotz vieler Hinweise auf die Existenz von dunkler Materie durch astrophysikalische Beobachtungen hat sich die dunkle Materie bis heute einem direkten oder indirekten Nachweis entzogen. Daher gehrt der Nachweis ihrer Existenz und die Enthüllung ihrer Natur zu einem der faszinierensten Herausforderungen der heutigen Kosmologie und Teilchenphysik. Diese Arbeit versucht die Natur von dunkler Materie durch indirekte Signaturen von der Paarzerstrahlung dunkler Materie in Elektron-Positronpaare auf zwei verschiedene Weisen zu untersuchen, nämlich anhand des Drucks durch die Paarzerstrahlung dunkler Materie und durch Grenzen des Wirkungsquerschnitts für die Paarzerstrahlung dunkler Materie aus verschiedenen Beobachtungsbereichen. Wir konzentrieren uns dabei auf die Zerstrahlung dunkler Materie in Elektron-Positron-Paare und betrachten einen modellunabhängigen Fall, bei dem alle Elektronen und Positronen mit der gleichen Anfangsenergie E_0 ~ m_dm*c^2 injiziert werden. Die Fortbewegung dieser Teilchen wird dabei bestimmt durch die Lösung der Diffusions-Verlust-Gleichung unter Berücksichtigung von inverser Compton-Streuung, Synchrotronstrahlung, Coulomb-Streuung, Bremsstrahlung und Ionisation. Der erste Teil dieser Arbeit zeigt, dass die Zerstrahlung dunkler Materie in Elektron-Positron-Paare die gemessene Rotationskurve signifikant beeinflussen kann. Die Produktionsrate ist dabei durch Daten von INTEGRAL, Fermi und H.E.S.S. begrenzt. Der Druck des relativistischen Elektron-Positron Gases wird aus dem Energiespektrum errechnet, welches durch die Diffusions-Verlust-Gleichung bestimmt ist. Für Werte der Gasdichte und des magnetischen Feldes, welche für unsere Galaxie repräsentativ sind, lässt sich abschätzen, dass für E_0 < 1 GeV die Druckgradienten stark genug sind, um Gravitationskräfte auszugleichen. Die genauen Werte hängen von den verwendeten astrophysikalischen Parametern ab, und sie ändern sich stark mit dem Anstieg des dunklen Materie-Profils. Für sehr große Anstiege, wie sie für adiabatische Kontraktion erwartet werden, werden die Rotationskurven von Spiralgalaxien auf Skalen von einegen Kiloparsek für die meisten Werte von E_0 beeinflusst. Durch Vergleich der erwarteten Rotationskurven mit Beobachtungen von Zwerggalaxien und Galaxien geringer Oberflächentemperatur zeigen wir, dass der Druck von Zerstrahlung dunkler Materie die Übereinstimmung von Theorie und Beobachtung in einigen Fällen verbessern kann. Aber daraus resultieren auch starke Grenzen für die Modellparameter - vor allem für den inneren Anstieg des Halo-Dichteprofils, sowie die Masse und den Wirkungsquerschnitt der dunklen Materie-Teilchen. Im zweiten Teil werden obere Grenzen für die Wirkungsquerschnitte der Zerstrahlung der dunkler Materie in Elektron-Positron-Paare erhalten, indem die beobachteten Daten bei unterschiedlichen Wellenlängen (von Haslam, WMAP und Fermi) mit aktuellen Messungen von Elektron-Positron Spektren in der solaren Nachbarschaft durch PAMELA, Fermi und H.E.S.S. kombiniert werden. Wir betrachten Synchrotronemission bei Radiound Mikrowellenfrequenzen, sowie inverse Compton-Streuung und Final-State-Strahlung bei Energien im Bereich der Gamma-Strahlung. Für die meisten Werte der Modellparameter werden die stärksten Schranken durch das lokale Positron-Spektrum und die Synchrotronemission im Zentrum unser Galaxie bestimmt. Nach diesen Ergebnissen sollte der Wirkungsquerschnitt für die Paarzerstrahlung nicht größer als der kanonische Wert für thermische Relikte sein, wenn die Masse der dunklen Materie-Kandidaten kleiner als einige GeV ist. Zusätzlich leiten wir eine obere Grenze für den inneren logarithmische Anstieg α des Dichteprofiles des dunklen Materie Halos unserer Galaxie ab.
Robbins, Glenn. "New Physics at Colliders and in Space." Thesis, Lyon, 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018LYSE1149/document.
Full textThe quest for new physics is a challenging task which involves, on the one hand, the search for dark matter particles from space, and on the other hand, the search at colliders for particles predicted by theories beyond the Standard Model, such as supersymmetry. With the experimental constraints on new particles getting stronger, it becomes crucial to combine the limits from both sectors in order to guide future searches. To this end, it is essential to estimate and take into account correctly the astrophysical, nuclear and cosmological uncertainties, which are most often ignored. The first part of this thesis is dedicated to the study of such uncertainties and to their impact on the constraints applied on supersymmetry. Moreover, we investigate the interplay between the constraints from colliders and dark matter searches in some detail. The second part concerns the development and the implementation in the public code SuperIso Relic of numerical tools for the calculation of direct and indirect dark matter detection constraints which were designed specifically to take correctly into account astrophysical and nuclear uncertainties. Finally, in the third part of this work, we consider the cosmological implications of a hypothetical discovery of new particles at colliders. We show that it would be possible to test the assumptions of the standard cosmological model and to obtain information on the properties of the primordial Universe at an epoch which is beyond observational reach
Scorza, Silvia. "EDELWEISS-II, direct Dark Matter search experiment : first data analysis and results." Phd thesis, Université Claude Bernard - Lyon I, 2009. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00561621.
Full textAdrián, Martínez Silvia. "Design and Development of an Acoustic Calibrator for Deep-Sea Neutrino Telescopes and First Search for Secluded Dark Matter with ANTARES." Doctoral thesis, Universitat Politècnica de València, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/10251/48877.
Full text[ES] La astronomía de neutrinos es un campo en auge dentro de la Física de Astropartículas. Los neutrinos ofrecen grandes ventajas como sondas para estudiar el Universo lejano y de alta energía. Es extensamente aceptado que mediante la combinación de la información que proporcionan los neutrinos junto a la obtenida mediante fotones de alta energía (rayos gamma) y partículas cargadas (rayos cósmicos) se podría obtener una imagen más completa de los procesos astrofísicos fundamentales que tienen lugar a lo largo de nuestro Universo.La razón fundamental por la que los neutrinos son tan altamente valorados como mensajeros es la baja interacción con el medio que los rodea. Al ser partículas sin carga interactúan muy débilmente con la materia, por ello pueden escaparse de la fuente donde se han producido y, al contrario de lo que ocurre con el resto de mensajeros, pueden llegar a la Tierra sin ser desviados por los campo magnéticos y sin prácticamente pérdida de energía. Esta misma razón que los hace tan valorados es a su vez la que los hace tan difíciles de detectar. Se impone la necesidad de construir detectores de grandes volúmenes, del orden del km3, altamente instrumentados. Se utilizan medios naturales (en el fondo del mar, en lagos o en enterrados en el hielo de la Antártida) aprovechando el agua (o hielo) como material diana donde se espera que interaccione el neutrino. ANTARES es el primer telescopio submarino de neutrinos construido en el fondo del mar Mediterráneo. Está optimizado para la detección óptica de la luz Cherenkov inducida por los muones relativistas producidos en la interacción de neutrinos de alta energía en los alrededores del detector. La información de la carga, posición y tiempo de llegada de los fotones a los fotomultiplicadores que componen el detector permite tanto la reconstrucción de la trayectoria del neutrino como el conocimiento de su energía. Además, ANTARES acoge el experimento AMADEUS mediante el cual se está investigando y testeando la detección acústica de neutrinos de muy alta energía que, al interaccionar en el agua, producen un pulso termo-acústico que se pretende registrar con una red de hidrófonos. El trabajo desarrollado en esta tesis se engloba bajo el marco del experimento ANTARES. Como es común en las tesis desarrolladas en este experimento, el trabajo se ha dividido en dos áreas diferenciadas: por un lado, una parte de enfoque más tecnológico y, por otro lado, una parte analítica de datos tomados por el telescopio. La primera parte de la tesis está centrada en el desarrollo de un calibrador capaz de reproducir la señal acústica que se emite en la interacción de un neutrino de alta energía con un núcleo de agua que, generalizando, es un pulso bipolar altamente directivo. El disponer de un buen calibrador es clave a la hora de testear la detección acústica en el telescopio y poder sintonizar y "entrenar" los los receptores para este tipo de señales. La segunda parte de la tesis se ha centrado en el análisis de datos registrados por ANTARES con el fin de contrastar posibles modelos astrofísicos para la búsqueda de materia oscura. Este trabajo ha focalizado en la detección de los productos de la aniquilación de materia oscura atrapada en el centro del Sol. Se ha testeado el modelo de Secluded Dark Matter (SDM) a través de la detección de di-muones (pareja de muones co-lineales) y neutrinos en la dirección del Sol. A grandes rasgos, este modelo se basa en la idea de la existencia de un mediador resultado de la aniquilación de materia oscura que posteriormente decaería en partículas del modelo estándar como muones o neutrinos. Estos modelos han sido propuestos con el fin de explicar ciertas 'anomalías' experimentales observadas, tales como el espectro del flujo de positrones detectado en satélites, medido recientemente con gran precisión por AMS-II. realizado en esta tesis constituye la primera búsqueda de evidencias
[CAT] L'astronomia de neutrins és un camp en auge dins la Física d'Astropartícules. Els neutrins ofereixen grans avantatges com a sondes per estudiar l'Univers llunyà i d'alta energia. Es extensament acceptat que mitjançant la combinació de la informació proporcionada pels neutrins junt a la obtinguda mitjançant fotons d'alta energia (rajos gamma) i partícules carregades (rajos còsmics) es podria obtindre una imatge més completa dels processos astrofísics fonamentals que es donen al llarg del nostre Univers. La raó fonamental per la qual els neutrins són altament valorats com a missatgers és la baixa interacció amb el medi que els envolta. Al ser partícules sense càrrega interactuen molt dèbilment amb la matèria, per això poden escapar-se de la font on s'han produït i, al contrari del que ocorre amb la resta de missatgers, poden arribar a La Terra sense desviar-se pels camps electromagnètics i sense pràcticament pèrdua d'energia. Aquesta mateixa raó que els fan tan valorats és al mateix temps la que els fa tan difícil de detectar. S'imposa la necessitat de construir detectors amb grans volums de detecció, de l'ordre del km3, altament instrumentats. S'utilitzen medis naturals (al fons de la mar, en llacs, al gel de l'Antàrtida) aprofitant l'aigua (o el gel) com a material diana on interaccionen el neutrins. ANTARES és el primer telescopi submarí de neutrins construït al fons de la mar Mediterrània. Està optimitzat per a la detecció òptica de la llum de Cherenkov induïda pels muons relativistes produïts en la interacció de neutrins d'alta energia als voltants del detector. La informació de la carrega, posició i temps d'arribada dels fotons als fotomultiplicadors que composen el detector permet tant la reconstrucció de la trajectòria del neutrí, amb gran resolució angular, com el coneixement de la seua energia. A més, ANTARES acull l'experiment AMADEUS mitjançant el qual s'està investigant i testejant la detecció acústica de neutrins de molt alta energia, que, al interaccionar a l'aigua produeixen un pols termo-acústic que es pretén registrar amb una xarxa d'hidròfons. El treball dut a terme en esta tesi s'engloba baix el marc de l'experiment ANTARES. Com es comú en les tesis desenvolupades en aquest experiment, el treball s'ha dividit en dues àrees diferenciades: per una banda una part d'enfocament mes tecnològic i, d'altra banda, una part analítica de les dades preses pel telescopi. La primera part de la tesi està centrada en el desenvolupament d'un calibrador capaç de reproduir la senyal acústica que es genera en la interacció d'un neutrí d'alta energia amb un nucli de l'aigua que, generalitzant, és un pols bipolar altament directiu. Disposar d'un bon calibrador es clau a l'hora de testejar la detecció acústica al telescopi i poder sintonitzar i "entrenar" els receptors a aquest tipus de senyals. La segona part de la tesi, amb caràcter d'anàlisi de dades, s'ha centrat en l'anàlisi de les dades registrades per ANTARES amb el fi de contrastar possibles models astrofísics per a la recerca de matèria fosca. Aquest treball es centra en la detecció dels productes d'aniquilació de matèria fosca atrapada al centre del Sol. En concret, s'ha testejat el model de Secluded Dark Matter (SDM) a través de la detecció de di-muons (parell de muons co-lineals) i neutrins en la direcció del Sol. A grans trets, aquest model es basa en la idea de l'existència d'un mediador resultat de l'aniquilació de matèria fosca que posteriorment decauria en partícules del model estàndard com muons o neutrins. Aquests models han sigut proposats amb la fi d'explicar certes "anomalies" experimentals observades, tals com l'espectre del flux de positrons detectat en satèl¿lits, mesurat recentment amb gran precisió per AMS-II. L'estudi realitzat en esta tesi constitueix la primera recerca d'evidències experimentals d'aquest tipus de models en telescopis de neutrins.
Adrián Martínez, S. (2015). Design and Development of an Acoustic Calibrator for Deep-Sea Neutrino Telescopes and First Search for Secluded Dark Matter with ANTARES [Tesis doctoral no publicada]. Universitat Politècnica de València. https://doi.org/10.4995/Thesis/10251/48877
TESIS
Vertongen, Gilles. "The fall and rise of antimatter: probing leptogenesis and dark matter models." Doctoral thesis, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/2013/ULB-DIPOT:oai:dipot.ulb.ac.be:2013/210200.
Full textAmong the possible mechanism which could be responsible for the creation of such a matter asymmetry, leptogenesis is particularly attractive because it only relies on the same ingredients previously introduced to generate neutrino masses. Unfortunatelly, this elegant proposal suffers from a major difficulty :it resists to any tentative of being probed by our low energy observables. In this thesis, we tackle the problem the other way around and propose a way to falsify this mechanism. Considering the type-I leptogenesis mechanism, i.e. a mechanism based on the asymmetric decay of right-handed neutrinos, in a left-right symmetric framework, we show that the observation of a right-handed gauge boson W_R at future colliders would rule out any possibility for such mechanism to be responsible of the matter asymmetry present in our Universe.
Another intriguing question that analyses of the anisotropies of the CMB confirmed is the presence of a non-baryonic component of matter in our Universe, i.e. the dark matter. As hinted by observations of galactic rotation curves, it should copiously be present in our galactic halo, but is notoriously difficult to detect directly. We can take advantage on the fact that antimatter almost disappeared from our surroundings to detect the contamination of cosmic rays from standard sources the annihilation products of dark matter would produce.
The second subject tackled in this work is the study of the imprints the Inert Doublet Modem (IDM) could leave in (charged) cosmic rays, namely positrons, antprotons and antideuterons. This model, first proposed to allow the Bout-Englert-Higgs particle to evade the Electroweak Precision Test (EWPT) measurements, introduces an additional scalar doublet which is inert in the sense that it does not couple directly to fermions. This latter property brings an additional virtue to this additional doublet :since it interacts weakly with particles, it can play the role of dark matter. This study will be done in the light of the data recently released by the PAMELA, ATIC and Fermi-GLAST collaborations, which reported e^± excesses in two different energy ranges.
Doctorat en Sciences
info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
Kelley-Hoskins, Nathan. "A Search for Extended Gamma-Ray Emission from the Galactic Center with VERITAS." Doctoral thesis, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.18452/21307.
Full textDark matter accounts for 24% of the universe’s energy, but the form in which it is stored is currently unknown. Understanding what form this matter takes is one of the major unsolved mysteries of modern physics. Much evidence exists for dark matter in the measurements of galaxies, dwarf galaxies, galaxy clusters, and cosmological measurements. One theory posits dark matter is a new undiscovered particle that only interacts via gravity and the weak force, called a weakly interacting massive particle (WIMP). One WIMP candidate is a supersymmetric particle called a neutralino. The objective of this thesis is to search for these dark matter particles, and attempt to measure their mass and cross section. Dark matter particles appear to concentrate in most galaxy-scale gravitational wells. One region of space that is both nearby and assumed to have a high density of dark matter is the center of our own galaxy. The neutralino is expected to annihilate into Standard Model particles, which may decay into photons. Therefore, a search for gamma rays near the Galactic Center may uncover the presence of dark matter. 108 hours of VERITAS gamma-ray observations of the Galactic Center are used in an unbinned likelihood analysis to search for dark matter. The Galactic Center’s low elevation results in VERITAS observing gamma rays in the 4–70 TeV energy range. The analysis used in this thesis consists of modeling the halo of dark matter at the Galactic Center, as well as the spectrum of gamma rays produced when two WIMPs annihilate. A point source is added to model the non-dark-matter gamma-ray emission detected from the Galactic Center. Background models are constructed from data of separate off-Galactic-Center observations. No dark matter signal is found in the 4–100 TeV mass range. Upper limits on the WIMP’s velocity-averaged cross section have been calculated, which above 70 TeV result in new limits of ⟨σv⟩ < (6.6 − 7.6) × 10−25 cm3 at the 95% confidence level.
Zukin, Phillip Gregory. "Dark matter dynamics." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/77258.
Full textThis electronic version was submitted by the student author. The certified thesis is available in the Institute Archives and Special Collections.
Cataloged from student-submitted PDF version of thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 147-150).
N-body simulations have revealed a wealth of information about dark matter halos but their results are largely empirical. Here we attempt to shed light on simulation results by using a combination of analytic and numerical methods. First we generalize an analytic model of halo formation, known as Secondary Infall, to include the effects of tidal torque. Given this model we compare its predictions for halo profiles to simulation results and infer that angular momentum plays an important role in setting the structure of dark matter profiles at small radii. Next, we focus on explaining the origin of universality in halos. We find evidence that diffusion -- which can potentially lead to universality -- occurs during halo evolution and is partially sourced by external torques from large scale structure. This is surprising given that the halo is nonlinear and typically thought to be unaffected by neighboring structures. Last, we describe promising ways to analytically describe the evolution of nonlinear halos using a Fokker-Planck formalism.
by Phillip Gregory Zukin.
Ph.D.
Billard, Julien. "Détection directionnelle de matière sombre avec MIMAC." Phd thesis, Université de Grenoble, 2012. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00727557.
Full textDa, Silva Jonathan. "Supersymmetric Dark Matter candidates in light of constraints from collider and astroparticle observables." Thesis, Grenoble, 2013. http://www.theses.fr/2013GRENY033/document.
Full textThe Standard Model of particle physics has been strengthened by the recent discovery of the long-awaited Higgs boson. The standard cosmological model has met the challenge of the high precision observations in comology and astroparticle physics. However these two standard models face both several theoretical issues, such as the naturalness problem in the Higgs sector of the Standard Model, as well as observational issues, in particular the fact that an unknown kind of matter called Dark Matter accounts for the majority of the matter content in our Universe. Attempts to solve such problems have led to the development of New Physics models during the last decades. Supersymmetry is one such model which addresses the fine-tuning problem in the Higgs sector and provides viable Dark Matter candidates. Current high energy and high precision experiments give many new opportunities to probe the supersymmetric models. It is in this context that this thesis is written. Considering the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM), the simplest supersymmetric extension of the Standard Model of particle physics, and its conventional Dark Matter candidate, the neutralino, it is shown that collider constraints could provide informations on the very early Universe at the inflation area. It is also demonstrated that the Indirect Detection of Dark Matter, despite several drawbacks, can be a powerful technique to probe supersymmetric Dark Matter models. Beyond the MSSM it is shown that unique characteristics of the Dark Matter candidate in the NMSSM could be probed at colliders. The study of a supersymmetric model with an extended gauge symmetry, the UMSSM, is also developed. The features of another Dark Matter candidate of this model, the Right-Handed sneutrino, are analysed. More general constraints such as those coming from low energy observables are finally considered in this model
D'Eramo, Francesco. "Hot and dark matter." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/76977.
Full textCataloged from PDF version of thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 253-273).
In this thesis, we build new Effective Field Theory tools to describe the propagation of energetic partons in hot and dense media, and we propose two new reactions for dark matter in the early universe. In the first part, we analyze the transverse momentum broadening in the absence of radiation of an energetic parton propagating through quark-gluon plasma via Soft Collinear Effective Theory (SCET). We show that the probability for picking up transverse momentum ki is given by the Fourier transform of the expectation value of two transversely separated light-like path-ordered Wilson lines. We evaluate the result for the strongly coupled plasma of N = 4 SYM theory by using gauge/gravity duality, and for the weakly coupled QCD plasma by using perturbation theory. In the second part, we introduce two new dark matter reactions, called "semi-annihilation" and "assimilation". The semi-annihilation reaction takes the schematic form [psi]i[psi]j -> [psi]k[psi], where [psi]i are stable dark matter particles and # is an unstable state. They lead to non-trivial dark matter dynamics in the early universe, and they might also take place today in the Milky Way, enriching the (semi-)annihilation final state spectrum observed in indirect detection experiments. The "assimilation" reaction efficiently destroy singlet dark matter particles, but dark matter number is stored in new quasi-stable heavy states which carry the baryon asymmetry. The subsequent annihilation and late-time decay of these heavy states yields (symmetric) dark matter as well as (asymmetric) standard model baryons.
by Francesco D'Eramo.
Ph.D.
McEwen, Joseph Eugene McEwen. "The Hidden Universe: Dark Energy, Dark Matter, Baryons." The Ohio State University, 2016. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1471877488.
Full textLin, Tongyan. "Signals of Particle Dark Matter." Thesis, Harvard University, 2012. http://dissertations.umi.com/gsas.harvard:10273.
Full textPhysics
Charif, Mohamad-ziad. "Indirect search for dark matter with the Antares telescope." Thesis, Aix-Marseille, 2012. http://www.theses.fr/2012AIXM4113/document.
Full textThe early history of modern physics have been full of problems fixed with un-orthodox yet brilliant solutions. From the Hydrogen electron orbit, black bodyradiation and the ultraviolet catastrophe, to the perihelion precession of Mercury.Quantum Mechanics and General Relativity not only solved these problems butthey opened the path to new observations and predictions about the Universe welive in and the introduction of new problems to be solved.One of the more modern problems we are facing today in physics is the largediscrepancy among measurements of the visible mass in the Universe and the pre-dictions of laws of gravity. An indisputable mass of evidence from different partsof observational cosmology is showing again and again that the observed lumi-nous mass in the Universe constitutes a tiny fraction of the matter that actuallyexists. The proposed solutions of this problem comes in two completely differentflavors. One proposed solution is that the laws of gravity are not the same in thelimit of tiny accelerations. Theories of modified gravitational dynamics proposea non-linear term in Newton law of gravity that becomes relevant at small accel-erations which in turn can explains the missing matter. The other solution to themissing matter is the introduction of new type of matter that does not interact withlight, making it invisible yet inferred to exist by its gravitational effect. The newmatter becomes a new elementary particle to be added to list of already knownelementary particles. While there are many candidates to this new elementaryparticle the favored one is called a WIMP or Weakly Interacting Massive Particle
Mishra-Sharma, Siddharth. "Extragalactic Searches for Dark Matter Annihilation." Thesis, Princeton University, 2018. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10928813.
Full textWe are at the dawn of a data-driven era in astrophysics and cosmology. A large number of ongoing and forthcoming experiments combined with an increasingly open approach to data availability offer great potential in unlocking some of the deepest mysteries of the Universe. Among these is understanding the nature of dark matter (DM)—one of the major unsolved problems in particle physics. Characterizing DM through its astrophysical signatures will require a robust understanding of its distribution in the sky and the use of novel statistical methods.
The first part of this thesis describes the implementation of a novel statistical technique which leverages the “clumpiness” of photons originating from point sources (PSs) to derive the properties of PS populations hidden in astrophysical datasets. This is applied to data from the Fermi satellite at high latitudes (|b| ≥ 30°) to characterize the contribution of PSs of extragalactic origin. We find that the majority of extragalactic gamma-ray emission can be ascribed to unresolved PSs having properties consistent with known sources such as active galactic nuclei. This leaves considerably less room for significant dark matter contribution.
The second part of this thesis poses the question: “what is the best way to look for annihilating dark matter in extragalactic sources?” and attempts to answer it by constructing a pipeline to robustly map out the distribution of dark matter outside the Milky Way using galaxy group catalogs. This framework is then applied to Fermi data and existing group catalogs to search for annihilating dark matter in extragalactic galaxies and clusters.
Sidhu, Jagjit Singh. "Probing Macroscopic Dark Matter Parameter Space." Case Western Reserve University School of Graduate Studies / OhioLINK, 2021. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=case1598956916361224.
Full textNg, Chun Yu. "Seeking the Light in the Dark: Quests for Identifying Dark Matter." The Ohio State University, 2016. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1471363029.
Full textCiocia, Giuseppe. "Emerging dark matter from corpuscular dark energy." Master's thesis, Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna, 2021. http://amslaurea.unibo.it/23294/.
Full textNecib, Lina. "Boosting (in)direct detection of dark matter." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/112073.
Full textCataloged from PDF version of thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 153-178).
In this thesis, I study the expected direct and indirect detection signals of dark matter. More precisely, I study three aspects of dark matter; I use hydrodynamic simulations to extract properties of weakly interacting dark matter that are relevant for both direct and indirect detection signals, and construct viable dark matter models with interesting experimental signatures. First, I analyze the full scale Illustris simulation, and find that Galactic indirect detection signals are expected to be largely symmetric, while extragalactic signals are not, due to recent mergers and the presence of substructure. Second, through the study of the high resolution Milky Way simulation Eris, I find that metal-poor halo stars can be used as tracers for the dark matter velocity distribution. I use the Sloan Digital Sky Survey to obtain the first empirical velocity distribution of dark matter, which weakens the expected direct detection limits by up to an order of magnitude at masses ~ 10 GeV. Finally, I expand the weakly interacting dark matter paradigm by proposing a new dark matter model called boosted dark matter. This novel scenario contains a relativistic component with interesting hybrid direct and indirect detection signatures at neutrino experiments. I propose two search strategies for boosted dark matter, at Cherenkov-based experiments and future liquid-argon neutrino detectors.
by Lina Necib.
Ph. D.
Fei, Lin S. B. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "Dark matter dynamics in the early universe." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/72934.
Full textCataloged from PDF version of thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 39).
We study a new form of dark matter interaction which may significantly affect the thermal relic abundance of dark matter. This new interaction takes the form C+D --> C+[phi], where D is the dark matter species present today, [phi] is a standard model species, and C is a very heavy exotic particle. In particular, C was present during the period when freeze-out occurred for dark matter species D, but subsequently decayed into standard model particles. We refer to this process as a catalytic reaction, since C acts as a catalyst for the destruction of D. We further postulate that there is a matter-antimatter asymmetry in C, so that C+C --> D+[phi] is suppressed. We find that the catalytic reaction produces very different dynamics than the standard annihilation reaction. We also find that the catalytic reaction can significantly affect the relic abundance of dark matter even if it has a much smaller cross section than the annihilation reaction. Possible physical origins for this catalytic reaction are discussed.
by Fei Lin.
S.B.
Sanderson, Robyn Ellyn. "Understanding dark matter halos with tidal caustics." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/68982.
Full textCataloged from PDF version of thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 181-188).
The products of interactions between galaxies with a high mass ratio and low orbital angular momentum are studied. The interactions scatter the material from the smaller galaxy into structures with distinctive dynamics and morphology, including high local densities and a simple density profile related to properties of the participating galaxies. The role of the larger galaxy's tides in creating these structures and their relation to a well-studied class of mathematical objects motivates us to name them "tidal caustics". We study the densities achievable in tidal caustics for a typical merger of this type using an example from the Andromeda galaxy to determine whether they are sufficient to produce a detectable gamma-ray signal from self-interactions in the dark matter component, for likely particle models of dark matter. We find that the expected signal is an order of magnitude too low to be detected with current instruments. We also study the constraints that can be placed on the properties of the participating galaxies by observing the surface brightness profiles of the tidal caustics. We find that the local gravity and gravity gradient of the larger galaxy, and the energy spread and initial phase space density of the smaller galaxy, can be jointly constrained by fitting this profile. The constraints are degenerate but model-independent. We find that measurements of multiple caustics and the velocity of the material in each caustic along the line of sight give information about the orbital angular momentum and the deviations from spherical symmetry in the larger galaxy, though this information is somewhat model-dependent. We discuss the main technical difficulty in fitting the surface brightness profile: determining the inclination angle of the caustic. We demonstrate that a simple model can successfully recover the necessary parameters for some cases, and that a simple modification to this model will improve its success rate.
by Robyn Ellyn Sanderson.
Ph.D.
Macias, Ramirez Oscar. "Astrophysical Constraints on Dark Matter." Thesis, University of Canterbury. Department of Physics and Astronomy, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10092/9857.
Full textJiang, Fangzhou. "Characterizing the Substructure of Dark Matter Halos." Thesis, Yale University, 2017. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10584949.
Full textHierarchical structure formation in the standard Λ+cold dark matter (CDM) model produces gravitationally bound clumpy halos with abundant substructure. These subhalos are the remnants of dark matter halos that have been accreted by their host halo over cosmic time, and have survived tidal destruction. Understanding halo substructure is extremely important, as subhalos are believed to host satellite galaxies, boost the dark matter annihilation signal, cause tidal heating of fragile structures such as stellar streams and disks, and are potentially responsible for interesting phenomena in gravitational lensing. Most importantly, the demographics of subhalos contain information of the Universe, thus providing a stringent testbed for the cosmological model.
This thesis provides a comprehensive study of dark matter subhalos, using a combination of cosmological N-body simulations and semi-analytic modeling. We start with developing a new, semi-analytic model describing halo assembly and subhalo evolution. The model combines Monte-Carlo techniques of generating halo merging histories and simple analytical descriptions for the evolution of subhalos, thus offering extremely fast computation, the agility to experiment with different cosmologies, and the control of specific physical processes. The model accurately predicts the distributions of subhalo mass and structural parameters in cosmological simulations, and outperforms simulations in terms of mass resolution and statistical power. Taking advantage of the speed and agility of the model, we present universal fitting formulae for subhalo mass and maximum circular velocity (&ngr;max) functions that are valid for a broad range in host halo mass, redshift and CDM cosmology.
The remainder of the dissertation makes use of the model, together with a number of state-of-the-art N-body simulations, to study the statistics of halo substructure. Recent high-resolution CDM simulations reveal ~10 massive Galactic subhalos whose central potential wells are too deep to be consistent with those of the ~10 brightest Milky-Way (MW) satellite galaxies. This inconsistency, dubbed the `too-big-to-fail' problem (TBTF), has become a persistent challenge to the standard ACDM cosmology. However, the number of well resolved Galactic halos in simulations is too small to fully capture the halo-to-halo variance in substructure content, which hinders the interpretation of the inconsistency. Unleashing the power of the semi-analytic model, we generate thousands of MW-size halos with well-resolved subhalo populations, and explicitly demonstrate that a reliable assessment of TBTF requires such large samples. We argue that existing statistics used to address TBTF suffer from the look-elsewhere effect and/or disregard certain aspects of the data on the MW satellite population. We devise a new statistic that is not hampered by these shortcomings, and, using data of the MW satellites with vmax > 15 km s-1, demonstrate that 1.4+3.3-1.1% of MW-size host halos have a subhalo population in statistical agreement with that of the MW. We also discuss how the severity of TBTF depends on halo mass and cosmology.
We conclude the thesis with a study of unprecedented statistical power regarding the halo-to-halo variance of substructure. First, we study the mass fraction (fsub) in subhalos as a function of host halo mass, formation redshift, and halo-centric distance. We note that recent measurements of fsub from gravitational lensing are much higher than the average but within the 90th percentile of the fsub distribution. Second, we quantify the deviation of the occupation statistics of subhalos from Poissonian statistics, which is widely assumed in halo occupation distribution (HOD) models. In particular, we clearly reveal the sub-Poissonian statistics at [special characters omitted] ≤ 3, aside from the already-known super-Poissonity at [special characters omitted] » 1, with [special characters omitted] the average number of subhalos. we also quantify the effect of the sub-Poissonity on the galaxy clustering predictions from HOD models. We further show that the extent of nonPoissonity depends on subhalo selection and on halo formation time - selecting subhalos by their mass or vmax at accretion yields weaker super-Poissonity for large [special characters omitted] but stronger sub-Poissonity for small [special characters omitted], compared to selecting by their present-day mass or vmax; earlier-formed halos exhibit less non-Poissonity than later-formed ones. Finally, we use the occupation statistics of the most massive satellites of the MW to put constraint on the mass and formation redshift of the MW halo. In particular, the `&ngr;max gap' of MW satellites between ~ 30 km s-1 and 60 km s-1 favors a low-mass, late-formed MW halo, with 0.25 < Mvir/1012 h-1M[special characters omitted] < 1.4 and 0.1 < zf < 1.4 at 90% confidence.
Hahn, ChangHoon. "Galaxies and Their Host Dark Matter Structures." Thesis, New York University, 2017. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10261676.
Full textThrough their connection with dark matter structures, galaxies act as tracers of the underlying matter distribution in the Universe. Their observed spatial distribution allows us to precisely measure large scale structure and effectively test cosmological models that explain the content, geometry, and history of the Universe. Current observations from galaxy surveys such as the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey have already probed vast cosmic volumes with millions of galaxies and ushered in an era of precision cosmology. The next surveys will probe over an order of magnitude more. With this unprecedented statistical power, the bottleneck of scientific discovery is in the methodology.
In this dissertation, I address major methodological challenges in constraining cosmology with the large-scale distribution of galaxies. I develop a robust framework for treating systematic effects, which significantly bias galaxy clustering measurements. I apply new innovative approaches to probabilistic parameter inference that challenge and test the in- correct assumptions of the standard approach. Furthermore, I use precise predictions of structure formation from cosmology and observations of galaxies during the last eight billion years to develop detailed models of how galaxies are impacted by their host dark matter structures. These models provide key insight into the galaxy-halo connection, which bridges the gap between cosmology theory and observations. They also answer crucial questions of how galaxies form and evolve. The developments in this dissertation will help unlock the full potential of future observations and allow us to precisely test cosmological models, General Relativity and modified gravity scenarios, and even particle physics theory beyond the Standard Model.
McCabe, Christopher. "Aspects of dark matter phenomenology." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2011. http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:74ec0d09-40d6-481d-b2ec-d0e9d41d5c1d.
Full textProfumo, Stefano. "Neutralino Dark Matter, where Particle Physics meets Cosmology." Doctoral thesis, SISSA, 2004. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11767/3961.
Full textColburn, Russell J. III. "Beyond the Standard Model: Dark Matter and Collider Physics." The Ohio State University, 2017. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1507215920939059.
Full textShuve, Brian. "Dark and Light: Unifying the Origins of Dark and Visible Matter." Thesis, Harvard University, 2012. http://dissertations.umi.com/gsas.harvard:10303.
Full textPhysics
Mondragon, Antonio Richard. "Lorentz-violating dark matter." [College Station, Tex. : Texas A&M University, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-1672.
Full textSchelke, Mia. "Supersymmetric Dark Matter : aspects of sfermion coannihilations." Doctoral thesis, Stockholm : Fysikum, Univ, 2004. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-192.
Full textLaycock, Thomas Daniel. "Dark matter excitations via massive vector bosons." Thesis, McGill University, 2008. http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=21959.
Full textUn model d'excitations matière sombre est etudié dans une tentative d'explication de la ligne d'emission anormalement large observé par le spectrographe SPI sur INTEGRAL originaire du bulbe galactique de la Voie Lactée. La matière sombre WIMP proposée possède un partenaire ayant une masse de quelques MeV supplémentaires. La diffusion entre les particules de matière sombre mène aux excitations et à la désintégration ultérieure en une paire électron-positron. De cette façon, l'énergie cinétique des particules de matière sombre peut être convertie en paires électron-positron se déplaçant suffisement lentement pour produire l'étroite ligne d'annihilation observée. Avec un espacement en masse suffisement grand, les considérations cinématique et un profil de densité de la matière sombre cuspy contraignent les excitations au bulbe galactique, où la vitesse d'échappement, et donc la fraction de particules matière sombre au-dessus du seuil cinétique, est grande.
Ståhl, Martin. "Probing the effect of dark matter velocity distributions on neutrino-based dark matter detection." Thesis, Uppsala universitet, Högenergifysik, 2019. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-395645.
Full textYegoryan, Hayk. "Study of alpha background in a dark matter detector." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/61272.
Full textCataloged from PDF version of thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 67).
Alpha background, specifically from radon and its progeny in the uranium and thorium chains, has been a major issue in dark matter detectors. This work focuses on alpha background presence in the DMTPC experiment by examining the energy distribution and the rate of alpha tracks in detector's fiducial volume. It was found that the rate and the energy distribution of alpha tracks are inconsistent with radon buildup in the detector. This was verified by replacing stainless steel materials with copper that is known to have lower uranium concentration. The alpha background was reduced 5 fold confirming that the origin of alphas is from early uranium decay chain, not radon buildup in the detector.
by Hayk Yegoryan.
S.B.
Kaboth, Asher C. (Asher Cunningham). "Detecting the invisible universe with neutrinos and dark matter." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/76980.
Full textCataloged from PDF version of thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 113-118).
Recent work in astrophysics has show that most of the matter in the universe is non-luminous. This work investigates two searches for non-luminous matter: hot dark matter formed from cosmic relic neutrinos from the Big Bang, and directional detection of cold dark matter. The cosmic neutrino background is investigated through the KATRIN experiment, using neutrino capture on tritium to search for a signal. A sensitivity at KATRIN of about 10⁴ events per year, or a local overdensity of relic neutrinos of about 3 x 10⁹ is found. Directional detection of cold dark matter provides a unique way to distinguish a dark matter signal from terrestrial backgrounds, using the expected direction of a dark matter wind based on astrophysical parameters. This work presents a new technique for directional dark matter detection--a drift chamber readout using a CCD camera. The backgrounds of this detector are investigated and enumerated, and a dark matter search sets a limit at mX =100 GeV of 3.7 x 10?³³ cm².
by Asher C. Kaboth.
Ph.D.
McCullough, Matthew Philip. "Topics in BSM physics : supersymmetry, dark matter and baryogenesis." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2011. http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:f2a6c703-8b95-4345-9477-4afeea355a8e.
Full textLAI, MICHELA. "Dark matter search and neutrino physics in Liquid Argon." Doctoral thesis, Università degli Studi di Cagliari, 2021. http://hdl.handle.net/11584/308084.
Full textDawson, William Anthony. "Constraining Dark Matter Through the Study of Merging Galaxy Clusters." Thesis, University of California, Davis, 2014. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3602041.
Full textContext: The majority (~85%) of the matter in the universe is composed of dark matter, a mysterious particle that does not interact via the electromagnetic force yet does interact with all other matter via the gravitational force. Many direct detection experiments have been devoted to finding interactions of dark matter with baryonic matter via the weak force. It is still possible that dark matter interacts with itself via a strong scale force and has a self-scattering cross-section of ~0.5 cm2g -1. In fact such a strong scale scattering force could resolve several outstanding astronomical mysteries: a discrepancy between the cuspy density profiles seen in ΛCDM simulations and the cored density profiles observed in low surface brightness galaxies, dwarf spheroidal galaxies, and galaxy clusters, as well as the discrepancy between the significant number of massive Milky Way dwarf spheroidal halos predicted by ΛCDM and the dearth of observed Milky Way dwarf spheroidal halos. Need: While such observations are in conflict with ΛCDM and suggest that dark matter may self-scatter, each suffers from a baryonic degeneracy, where the observations might be explained by various baryonic processes (e.g., AGN or supernove feedback, stellar winds, etc.) rather than self-interacting dark matter (SIDM). If dark matter lags behind the effectively collisionless galaxies then this is clear evidence that dark matter self-interacts. The expected galaxy-dark matter offset is typically >25 kpc (for cross-sections that would explain the other aforementioned issues with ΛCDM), this is larger than the scales of that are plagued by the baryonic degeneracies. Task: To test whether dark matter self-interacts we have carried out a comprehensive survey of the dissociative merging galaxy cluster DLSCL J0916.2+2951 (also known as the Musket Ball Cluster). This survey includes photometric and spectroscopic observations to quantify the position and velocity of the cluster galaxies, weak gravitational lensing observations to map and weigh the mass (i.e., dark matter which comprises ~85% of the mass) of the cluster, Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect and X-ray observations to map and quantify the intracluster gas, and finally radio observations to search for associated radio relics, which had they been observed would have helped constrain the properties of the merger. Using this information in conjunction with a Monte Carlo analysis model I quantify the dynamic properties of the merger, necessary to properly interpret constraints on the SIDM cross-section. I compare the locations of the galaxies, dark matter and gas to constrain the SIDM cross-section. This dissertation presents this work. Findings: We find that the Musket Ball is a merger with total mass of 4.8+3.2-1.5×10 14Msun. However, the dynamic analysis shows that the Musket Ball is being observed 1.1+1.3-0.4 Gyr after first pass through and is much further progressed in its merger process than previously identified dissociative mergers (for example it is 3.4+3.8 -1.4 times further progressed that the Bullet Cluster). By observing that the dark matter is significantly offset from the gas we are able to place an upper limit on the dark matter cross-section of σSIDMm -1DM < 8 cm2g-1. However, we find an that the galaxies appear to be leading the weak lensing (WL) mass distribution by 20.5" (129 kpc at z=0.53) in southern subcluster, which might be expected to occur if dark matter self-interacts. Contrary to this finding though the WL mass centroid appears to be leading the galaxy centroid by 7.4" (47 kpc at z=0.53) in the northern subcluster. Conclusion: The southern offset alone suggests that dark matter self-interacts with ~83% confidence. However, when we account for the observation that the galaxy centroid appears to trail the WL centroid in the north the confidence falls to ~55%. While the SIDM scenario is slightly preferred over the CDM scenario it is not significantly so. Perspectives: The galaxy-dark matter offset measurement is dominated by random errors in each cluster. Thus measuring this offset in other dissociative mergers holds the promise of reducing our uncertainty and enabling us to: 1) state confidently whether dark matter self-interacts via a new dark sector force, or 2) constrain the dark matter cross-section to such a degree that SIDM cannot explain the aforementioned mysteries. To this end we have established the Merging Cluster Collaboration to observe and simulate an ensemble of dissociative merging clusters. We are currently in the process of analyzing six dissociative mergers with existing data, and carrying out multi-wavelength observations of a new sample of 15 radio relic identified dissociative mergers. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)
Plank, Steven J. S. "The DRIFT Dark Matter Project : directionality, sensitivity, and environmental backgrounds." Thesis, University of Edinburgh, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/1842/3128.
Full textYlinen, Tomi. "Towards detecting lines from dark matter annihilations with GLAST." Licentiate thesis, Stockholm : Fysik, Kungliga Tekniska högskolan, 2008. http://kth.diva-portal.org/smash/record.jsf?searchId=2&pid=diva2:37344.
Full textSharma, Arjun. "Placing Limits on Experimental Signatures of Dark Matter Model Predictions." Thesis, The University of Chicago, 2018. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10807985.
Full textIn this work, we consider two different models of dark matter and set limits on results of experiments. One is a dynamic dark matter scenario where we put limits on parameters observable by experiments DAMA and XMASS through nuclear recoil of detector atoms (direct detection). The second is a case of dark matter annihilation into positrons and electrons and the signal this would produce on measured values of positron flux and ratio of electron to positron (indirect detection). The values of these quantities as measured by FERMI and PAMELA experiments are observed and an explanation using a dark matter annihilation is presented vs astrophysical sources of particles.
We explore a dynamic dark matter scenario with an ensemble of dark matter particles that starts at m0 and spans a comb of particles separated by jδΔ m. We verify the model by using Δm = ∞ and comparing the predictions to a non dynamic model for the same mass m0. We then observe the wider set of possibilities available with the dynamic dark matter model compared with the single mass case vis a vis constraints set by NaI and Xe detectors published by the DAMA and XMASS collaborations and check for validity of model against these measurements.
The Fermi experiment has measured the cosmic ray electron+positron spectrum and positron fraction [фe+/(фe++e−)], and PAMELA has measured the positron fraction with better precision. While the majority of cosmic ray electrons and positrons are of astrophysical origin, there may also be a contribution from dark matter annihilation in the galactic halo. The upcoming results of the AMS experiment will show measurements of these quantities with far greater precision. One dark matter annihilation scenario is where two dark matter particles annihilate directly to e + and e− final states. In this article, we calculate the signature “bumps” in these measurements assuming a given density profile (NFW profile). If the dark matter annihilates to electrons and positrons with a cross section σv ∼ 10−26 cm3/s or greater, this feature may be discernible by AMS. However, we demonstrate that such a prominent spectral feature is already ruled out by the relative smoothness of the positron + electron cosmic ray spectrum as measured by Fermi. Hence we conclude that such a feature is undetectable unless the mass is less than ∼40 GeV.
Mitridate, Andrea. "Bindings in the dark : bound states in dark matter phenomenology." Doctoral thesis, Scuola Normale Superiore, 2019. http://hdl.handle.net/11384/85901.
Full text