EBookClubs

Read Books & Download eBooks Full Online

EBookClubs

Read Books & Download eBooks Full Online

Book A Search for Spectral Lines from WIMP Annihilation in the Milky Way Using the Fermi Large Area Telescope

Download or read book A Search for Spectral Lines from WIMP Annihilation in the Milky Way Using the Fermi Large Area Telescope written by Yvonne Vasetta Edmonds and published by Stanford University. This book was released on 2011 with total page 161 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The most popular class of dark matter candidates is the class of weakly-interacting massive particles (WIMPs). The Fermi Large Area Telescope has the possibility of indirectly detecting WIMPs by the flux from their annihilation/decay products. When a WIMP annihilates or decays directly into a photon gamma and another particle Y the photons are monochromatic. Detection of the resulting spectral line(s) would provide convincing evidence for particulate dark matter and could provide the WIMP mass. In the case of no detection, knowledge of the dark matter distribution can be used to place limits on the annihilation cross section and lifetime for the WIMP(s) to Y-gamma channel. We present the spectrum from 4.8 to 264 GeV and spectral line flux upper limits, obtained from a subset of this spectrum, from 7 to 200 GeV. The spatial region of the dataset covers a large portion of the sky, the high latitudes plus the Galactic Center. We report upper limits on the WIMP cross sections for annihilation to gamma-gamma and Z-gamma and lower limits on the WIMP lifetime for decay to gamma-neutrino. We discuss the implications of the spectrum and line flux limits for several dark matter models with optimistic branching ratios for photon channels.

Book A Search for Spectral Lines from WIMP Annihilation in the Milky Way Using the Fermi Large Area Telescope

Download or read book A Search for Spectral Lines from WIMP Annihilation in the Milky Way Using the Fermi Large Area Telescope written by Yvonne Vasetta Edmonds and published by . This book was released on 2011 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The most popular class of dark matter candidates is the class of weakly-interacting massive particles (WIMPs). The Fermi Large Area Telescope has the possibility of indirectly detecting WIMPs by the flux from their annihilation/decay products. When a WIMP annihilates or decays directly into a photon gamma and another particle Y the photons are monochromatic. Detection of the resulting spectral line(s) would provide convincing evidence for particulate dark matter and could provide the WIMP mass. In the case of no detection, knowledge of the dark matter distribution can be used to place limits on the annihilation cross section and lifetime for the WIMP(s) to Y-gamma channel. We present the spectrum from 4.8 to 264 GeV and spectral line flux upper limits, obtained from a subset of this spectrum, from 7 to 200 GeV. The spatial region of the dataset covers a large portion of the sky, the high latitudes plus the Galactic Center. We report upper limits on the WIMP cross sections for annihilation to gamma-gamma and Z-gamma and lower limits on the WIMP lifetime for decay to gamma-neutrino. We discuss the implications of the spectrum and line flux limits for several dark matter models with optimistic branching ratios for photon channels.

Book Optimized Dark Matter Searches in Deep Observations of Segue 1 with MAGIC

Download or read book Optimized Dark Matter Searches in Deep Observations of Segue 1 with MAGIC written by Jelena Aleksić and published by Springer. This book was released on 2015-11-06 with total page 184 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This thesis presents the results of indirect dark matter searches in the gamma-ray sky of the near Universe, as seen by the MAGIC Telescopes. The author has proposed and led the 160 hours long observations of the dwarf spheroidal galaxy Segue 1, which is the deepest survey of any such object by any Cherenkov telescope so far. Furthermore, she developed and completely characterized a new method, dubbed “Full Likelihood”, that optimizes the sensitivity of Cherenkov instruments for detection of gamma-ray signals of dark matter origin. Compared to the standard analysis techniques, this novel approach introduces a sensitivity improvement of a factor of two (i.e. it requires 4 times less observation time to achieve the same result). In addition, it allows a straightforward merger of results from different targets and/or detectors. By selecting the optimal observational target and combining its very deep exposure with the Full Likelihood analysis of the acquired data, the author has improved the existing MAGIC bounds to the dark matter properties by more than one order of magnitude. Furthermore, for particles more massive than a few hundred GeV, those are the strongest constraints from dwarf galaxies achieved by any gamma-ray instrument, both ground-based or space-borne alike.

Book Aspects of WIMP Dark Matter Searches at Colliders and Other Probes

Download or read book Aspects of WIMP Dark Matter Searches at Colliders and Other Probes written by Enrico Morgante and published by Springer. This book was released on 2017-10-05 with total page 212 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This thesis covers several theoretical aspects of WIMP (weakly interacting massive particles) dark matter searches, with a particular emphasis on colliders. It mainly focuses on the use of effective field theories as a tool for Large Hadron Collider (LHC) searches, discussing in detail the issue of their validity, and on simplified dark matter models, which are receiving a growing attention from the physics community. It highlights the theoretical consistency of simplified models, which is essential in order to correctly exploit their potential and for them to be a common reference when comparing results from different experiments. This thesis is of interest to researchers (both theorists and experimentalists) in the field of dark matter searches, and offers a comprehensive introduction to dark matter and to WIMP searches for students and non-experts.

Book The Search for WIMP Dark Matter Continuum Gamma ray Emission from Dark Matter Satellites in the Milky Way Using the Fermi LAT

Download or read book The Search for WIMP Dark Matter Continuum Gamma ray Emission from Dark Matter Satellites in the Milky Way Using the Fermi LAT written by Wang Ping and published by Stanford University. This book was released on 2011 with total page 167 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This thesis focuses on the search for unknown dark matter (DM) satellites in the Milky Way using the Fermi Large Area Space Telescope (LAT). The Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope (Fermi) is a next generation space observatory, which was successfully launched on June 11th, 2008. The LAT is the principal scientific instrument onboard. Its unprecedented angular resolution and sensitivity in the 100 MeV to > 300 GeV energy range makes it an excellent instrument for probing the sky for DM satellites. Current N-body simulations based on the Lambda-CDM cosmology model predict a large number of as yet unobserved DM satellites in our galaxy; some satellites are predicted to be extended sources (> 1deg extension) as seen by the LAT. Our work assumes that a significant component of DM is a Weakly Interacting Massive Particle (WIMP) in the 100 GeV mass range. The annihilation of WIMPs results in many high energy gamma rays that can be well measured by the LAT. The WIMP produced gamma-ray spectrum from the putative DM satellites is considerably harder than most astrophysical sources. Also, DM satellites have no astronomical counterparts in the X-ray and radio bands, and the emission has no time variability. My thesis will focus on a blind analysis in the search for unknown DM satellites using one year of LAT data, and setting constraints on some WIMP models based on the results of our analysis in which we find no candidates.

Book The Role of Halo Substructure in Gamma Ray Dark Matter Searches

Download or read book The Role of Halo Substructure in Gamma Ray Dark Matter Searches written by Miguel A. Sánchez-Conde and published by MDPI. This book was released on 2020-05-28 with total page 220 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: An important, open research topic today is to understand the relevance that dark matter halo substructure may have for dark matter searches. In the standard cosmological model, halo substructure or subhalos are predicted to be largely abundant inside larger halos, for example, galaxies such as ours, and are thought to form first and later merge to form larger structures. Dwarf satellite galaxies—the most massive exponents of halo substructure in our own galaxy—are already known to be excellent targets for dark matter searches, and indeed, they are constantly scrutinized by current gamma-ray experiments in the search for dark matter signals. Lighter subhalos not massive enough to have a visible counterpart of stars and gas may be good targets as well, given their typical abundances and distances. In addition, the clumpy distribution of subhalos residing in larger halos may boost the dark matter signals considerably. In an era in which gamma-ray experiments possess, for the first time, the exciting potential to put to test the preferred dark matter particle theories, a profound knowledge of dark matter astrophysical targets and scenarios is mandatory should we aim for accurate predictions of dark matter-induced fluxes for investing significant telescope observing time on selected targets and for deriving robust conclusions from our dark matter search efforts. In this regard, a precise characterization of the statistical and structural properties of subhalos becomes critical. In this Special Issue, we aim to summarize where we stand today on our knowledge of the different aspects of the dark matter halo substructure; to identify what are the remaining big questions, and how we could address these; and, by doing so, to find new avenues for research.

Book Advances in Modern and Applied Sciences

Download or read book Advances in Modern and Applied Sciences written by Sujay Pal and published by Scientific Research Publishing, Inc. USA. This book was released on 2022-11-10 with total page 269 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This book Advances in Modern and Applied Science materializes our long-cherished dream of publishing a series of volumes consisting of review papers on contemporary research fields from a broad spectrum of basic sciences. The present volume, which is our first baby-step towards that fulfilment, includes a collection of twenty-five review articles contributed by about fifty researchers and scientists whose vocations are in diverse fields of science including astrophysics, astronomy, high energy physics, space science, atmospheric sciences, computer sciences to material sciences.

Book Searching for Dark Matter with the ATLAS Detector

Download or read book Searching for Dark Matter with the ATLAS Detector written by Steven Schramm and published by Springer. This book was released on 2016-11-23 with total page 324 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This thesis describes the search for Dark Matter at the LHC in the mono-jet plus missing transverse momentum final state, using the full dataset recorded in 2012 by the ATLAS Experiment. It is the first time that the number of jets is not explicitly restricted to one or two, thus increasing the sensitivity to new signals. Instead, a balance between the most energetic jet and the missing transverse momentum is required, thus selecting mono-jet-like final states. Collider searches for Dark Matter have typically used signal models employing effective field theories (EFTs), even when comparing to results from direct and indirect detection experiments, where the difference in energy scale renders many such comparisons invalid. The thesis features the first robust and comprehensive treatment of the validity of EFTs in collider searches, and provides a means by which the different classifications of Dark Matter experiments can be compared on a sound and fair basis.

Book Particle Dark Matter

    Book Details:
  • Author : Gianfranco Bertone
  • Publisher : Cambridge University Press
  • Release : 2010-01-07
  • ISBN : 0521763681
  • Pages : 763 pages

Download or read book Particle Dark Matter written by Gianfranco Bertone and published by Cambridge University Press. This book was released on 2010-01-07 with total page 763 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Describes the dark matter problem in particle physics, astrophysics and cosmology for graduate students and researchers.

Book Cosmology and the Early Universe

Download or read book Cosmology and the Early Universe written by Pasquale Di Bari and published by CRC Press. This book was released on 2018-09-03 with total page 185 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This book discusses cosmology from both an observational and a strong theoretical perspective. The first part focuses on gravitation, notably the expansion of the universe and determination of cosmological parameters, before moving onto the main emphasis of the book, the physics of the early universe, and the connections between cosmological models and particle physics. The book provides links with particle physics and with investigations of the theories beyond the Standard Model, especially in connection to dark matter and matter-antimatter asymmetry puzzles. Readers will gain a comprehensive account of cosmology and the latest observational results, without requiring prior knowledge of relativistic theories, making the text ideal for students. Features: Provides a self-contained discussion of modern cosmology results without requiring any prior knowledge of relativistic theories, enabling students to learn the first rudiments needed for a rigorous comprehension of cosmological concepts Contains a timely discussion of the latest cosmological results, including those from WMAP and the Planck satellite, and discuss the cosmological applications of the Nobel Prize 2017 awarded discovery of gravitational waves by the LIGO interferometer and the very high energy neutrinos discovered by the IceCube detector Includes original figures complementing mathematical derivations and accounting for the most important cosmological observations, in addition to a wide variety of problems with a full set of solutions discussed in detail in an accompanying solutions manual (available upon qualifying course adoption) To view the errata please visit the authors personal webpage.

Book From the Fermi Scale to Cosmology

Download or read book From the Fermi Scale to Cosmology written by Alberto Salvio and published by Frontiers Media SA. This book was released on 2019-12-06 with total page 265 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Study of Non thermal Emission from Supernova Remnants and Cosmic Ray Injection in the Milky Way Using the Fermi Large Area Telescope

Download or read book Study of Non thermal Emission from Supernova Remnants and Cosmic Ray Injection in the Milky Way Using the Fermi Large Area Telescope written by Shiu Hang Lee and published by Stanford University. This book was released on 2011 with total page 148 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Supernova remnants (SNRs) are the only class of sources known in our Galaxy capable of providing the energy necessary to power the bulk of the Galactic cosmic-rays (CRs) below the `knee' (~ 3 PeV). They are observable across the entire frequency spectrum from radio to TeV gamma-rays, and are known to exhibit a rich variety of complex morphologies in multi-wavelength. Non-thermal emissions from SNRs in X-ray and gamma-ray arise from interaction between particles accelerated by the SNR blast wave and the surrounding medium, and are hence one of the most useful probe for the Galactic CR production process. In this thesis, we will try to obtain a fuller understanding of the origin of Galactic CRs through studying non-thermal emissions from SNRs and modelling CR injection from their astrophysical accelerators. In the first part of the thesis, we will develop a robust tool to simulate time and space-resolved broadband emission from young shell-type SNRs using coupled hydrodynamic and diffusive shock acceleration (DSA) calculations. Usually, the DSA process is expected to be highly non-linear for young SNRs due to a number of postulated coupling phenomena, which leads to the inter-correlation of the emission spectra and morphology at different wavelengths. Therefore, to gain the full picture, it is important to combine multi-wavelength observations and the relevant physical processes into a self-consistent and flexible calculation framework. By taking into account particle transport, escape, interaction and various radiative processes, our tool can predict photon emissivity in full three-dimension and multi-wavelength for any given SNR model and surrounding environment, such as in the presence of a nearby molecular cloud. Through illustrations using a few typical models for Type Ia SNR, we will demonstrate its capability of calculating results directly comparable to observations, as well as to pinpoint the gamma-ray emission mechanism, namely the leptonic and hadronic scenarios. In the second part, we will study the gamma-ray emission from a middle-aged SNR IC 443 (G189.1+3.0) using the Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT). IC 443 has been extensively studied in the past few decades through radio to TeV gamma-ray, but high quality data in the sub-GeV to sub-TeV band, the most crucial window for constraining the origin of the high-energy emission, has still been missing. We will fill in this gap by analyzing LAT data from 200 MeV to 50 GeV using the 1st year of LAT data. Equipped with the high photon statistics available, and the excellent resolution, sensitivity and low background rate of LAT, we are able to probe the gamma-ray emission from IC 443 with minimal confusion with the backgrounds. We discovered spatially extended emission from IC 443 in the 1 - 50 GeV band for the first time, which eliminates the pulsar wind nebula (PWN) as the dominating gamma-ray emitter. We found good spatial correlation of the GeV mission with the TeV source recently detected by VERITAS, as well as a known group of ambient and shocked molecular clouds (MC). The sub-GeV to TeV broadband spectrum can be described by a power-law with a smooth break at a few GeV, the same feature also observed from several other LAT-detected middle-aged SNRs interacting with MCs. We will argue that the gamma-ray emission is most naturally explained by a neutral pion decay dominated origin, and the leptonic scenarios are disfavored. Finally, we will also discuss the major discoveries from LAT observations of other gamma-ray bright Galactic SNRs during the first 2 years of operation of Fermi. In the last part, we will construct a model of Galactic CR injection using constraints from most recent GeV and TeV observation data and CR measurements, which can provide a natural explanation for the enhanced positron flux above 10 GeV recently observed by PAMELA as compared to previous measurements. Without making speculation on `additional' positron contribution from any special nearby objects or resorting to exotic phenomena, we will look at a steady-state picture of our Galaxy in which the ensembles of SNRs and PWNe steadily inject CRs into the interstellar space. Using the GALPROP CR propagation code, the CR spectra and ratios at Earth are calculated and compared with data. Without tweaking the model parameters specifically to fit the positron data other than using observation and astrophysics-based assumptions, we will show that this steady-state model can satisfactorily reproduce the positron enhancement and other CR measurement results. Assisted by recent observations of middle-aged SNRs interacting with MCs by Fermi LAT, we are also able to set an upper-limit on the total number of these systems residing in our Galaxy. Finally, using this consistent model, we will estimate the energy budgets of the major species of Galactic CRs.

Book Cities and Their Vital Systems

Download or read book Cities and Their Vital Systems written by Advisory Committee on Technology and Society and published by National Academies Press. This book was released on 1989 with total page 1298 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Cities and Their Vital Systems asks basic questions about the longevity, utility, and nature of urban infrastructures; analyzes how they grow, interact, and change; and asks how, when, and at what cost they should be replaced. Among the topics discussed are problems arising from increasing air travel and airport congestion; the adequacy of water supplies and waste treatment; the impact of new technologies on construction; urban real estate values; and the field of "telematics," the combination of computers and telecommunications that makes money machines and national newspapers possible.

Book An Introduction to Particle Dark Matter

Download or read book An Introduction to Particle Dark Matter written by Stefano Profumo and published by Wspc (Europe). This book was released on 2017 with total page 270 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Particle dark matter: the name of the game -- The thermal relic paradigm: zeroth-order lessons from cosmology -- The thermal relic paradigm: a closer look -- The art of WIMP direct detection -- Indirect dark matter searches -- Searching for dark matter with particle colliders -- Axions and axion-like particles as dark matter -- Sterile neutrinos as dark matter particles -- Bestiarium: a short, biased compendium of notable dark matter particle candidates and models

Book Science With The Cherenkov Telescope Array

Download or read book Science With The Cherenkov Telescope Array written by The Cta Consortium and published by World Scientific. This book was released on 2018-12-31 with total page 365 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This book summarizes the science to be carried out by the upcoming Cherenkov Telescope Array, a major ground-based gamma-ray observatory that will be constructed over the next six to eight years. The major scientific themes, as well as core program of key science projects, have been developed by the CTA Consortium, a collaboration of scientists from many institutions worldwide.CTA will be the major facility in high-energy and very high-energy photon astronomy over the next decade and beyond. CTA will have capabilities well beyond past and present observatories. Thus, CTA's science program is expected to be rich and broad and will complement other major multiwavelength and multimessenger facilities. This book is intended to be the primary resource for the science case for CTA and it thus will be of great interest to the broader physics and astronomy communities. The electronic version (e-book) is available in open access.

Book Cosmic Rays for Particle and Astroparticle Physics

Download or read book Cosmic Rays for Particle and Astroparticle Physics written by S Giani and published by World Scientific. This book was released on 2011-06-29 with total page 668 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The conference was aimed at promoting contacts between scientists involved in solar-terrestrial physics, space physics, astroparticle physics and cosmology both from the theoretical and the experimental approach. The conference was devoted to physics and physics requirements, survey of theoretical models and performances of detectors employed (or to be employed) in experiments for fundamental physics, astroparticle physics, astrophysics research and space environment — including Earth magnetosphere and heliosphere and solar-terrestrial physics. Furthermore, cosmic rays have been used to extend the scientific research experience to teachers and students with air shower arrays and other techniques. Presentations included the following subjects: advances in physics from present and next generation ground and space experiments, dark matter, double beta decay, high-energy astrophysics, space environment, trapped particles, propagation of cosmic rays in the Earth atmosphere, Heliosphere, Galaxy and broader impact activities in cosmic rays science. The open and flexible format of the Conference was conducive to fruitful exchanges of points of view among participants and permitted the evaluation of the progresses made and indicated future research directions. The participants were experienced researchers but also graduate students (MSc and PhD) and recent postdoctoral fellows. Errata(s) Nuclear and Non-Ionizing Energy-Loss for Coulomb Scattered Particles from Low Energy up to Relativistic Regime in Space Radiation Environment: Page 17 to Page 22 (245 KB) Contents:Broader Impacts Activites and Treatments:VHE Spectral Energy Distribution of Crab Nebula Compared with the Prediction of a Synchrotron Self-Compton Emission Model (V G Sinitsyna, A Y Alaverdian, A S Boldyrev, S S Borisov, R M Mirsafatikhov and V Y Sinitsyna)Nuclear and Non-Ionizing Energy-Loss for Coulomb Scattered Particles from Low Energy Up to Relativistic Regime in Space Radiation Environment (M J Boschini, C Consolandi, M Gervasi, S Giani, D Grandi, V Ivanchenko, S Pensotti, P G Rancoita and M Tacconi)Study of the Natural Radioactivity Influence on ARGO-YBJ Detector (I Bolognino, C Cattaneo, E Giroletti, G Liguori, P Salvini, P Vallania and C Vigorito)High-Accuracy Determination of Fabry-Perot Effective Mirror Spacing Used for the Receivers of Atmospheric Monitoring in VHE Gamma Ray Astronomy (S Maltezos, E Fokitis, N Maragos, V Gika, A Georgakopoulou, E Koubli and G Koutsourakis)AMS-02 Photon Data Reduction Approach (G Boella, M J Boschini, C Consolandi, S Della Torre, M Gervasi, D Grandi, E Memola, S Pensotti, P G Rancoita and M Tacconi)CZELTA: An Overview of the Czech Large-Area Time Coincidence Array (K Smolek, J Čermák, J Hubík, S Pospíšil, P Přidal, J Smejkal, I Štekl, F Blaschke, P Lichard and V Vícha)Calibration of the CMS Electromagnetic Calorimeter with First LHC Data (V Sola)On the Detectability of Cosmic Ray Electron Spectral Features in the Microwave/mm-Wave Range (A Tartari, M Gervasi, G Sironi, M Zannoni and S Spinelli)Science in the Schools — the Extreme Energy Events Project (M Abbrescia, R Antolini, R Baldini Ferroli, G Bencivenni, E Bressan, A Chiavassa, C Cical, L Cifarelli, F Coccetti, D De Gruttola, S DePasquale, M DIncecco, F L Fabbri, V Frolov, M Garbini, C Gustavino, D Hatzifotiadou, P La Rocca, F Librizzi, A Maggiora, H Menghetti, S Miozzi, R Moro, M Panareo, G Piragino, F Riggi, F Romano, G Sartorelli, E Scapparone, M Selvi, S Serci, E Siddi, M C S Williams, A Zichichi and R Zuyeuski)A Cosmic Ray Detector Array for Schools in the Cambridge Region (S A Wotton, M J Goodrick, B Hommels and M A Parker)Observation of Electroscalar Radiation During a Solar Eclipse (O A Zaymidoroga and D V Podgainy)Young Researchers Focus on the Extreme Energy Universe (James L Pinfold)Cosmic Rays Experimental Observations and Searches:Galactic Cosmic Ray Production in Tycho's SNR and Geminga (V G Sinitsyna, A Y Alaverdian, S S Borisov, S I Nikolsky and V Y Sinitsyna)The CUORICINO and CUORE Neutrinoless Double Beta Decay Experiments (T I Banks)Results from DAMA/LIBRA (R Bernabei, P Belli, F Montecchia, F Nozzoli, F Cappella, A d'Angelo, A Incicchitti, D Prosperiy, R Cerulli, C J Dai, H L He, X H Ma, X D Sheng, Z P Yez and R G Wang)Recent Results from the Fermi Large Area Space Telescope (Emanuele Bonamente)Gamma-Ray Activity of Cygnus X-3 at Energy Range of 1-100 TeV During 15 Year Observations of SHALON (V G Sinitsyna, A Y Alaverdian, S S Borisov, S I Nikolsky and V Y Sinitsyna)Signatures of Middle Aged, Nearby Pulsars in the Cosmic Ray Lepton Spectrum? (I Büsching and Okker C deJager)Highlights from the ARGO-YBJ Experiment (P Camarri)Status of MAGIC and Recent Results (A de Angelis and V Scalzotto)Recent HESS Results (B Degrange)Atmospheric Evaluation with LIDAR for MAGIC (C Fruck, J Hose, R Mirzoyan and M Teshima)The AMS-02 Silicon Tracker (S Haino)From the Knee to the Ankle: From Galactic to Extragalactic Origin of Cosmic Rays? (Andreas Haungs)High Energy Cosmic-Ray Photons and Helium (Stanislav Borisov, Sergey Voronov, Arkady Galper and Alexander Karelin)Status of UHE CR Orbital Fluorescence Detector TUS (P Klimov, G Garipov, B Khrenov, N Kalmykov, V Morozenko, M Panasyuk, S Sharakin, A Shirokov, I Yashin, S Biktemerova, A Grinyuk, D Naumov, L Tkachev, A Tkachenko, O Saprykin, I Park, J Lee, G Na, O Martinez and H Salazar)The Observation of the Light Component Spectrum in the 5–250 TeV Region by the ARGO-YBJ Experiment (S M Mari and P Montini)Status and Plans of the LUCIFER Experiment (F Orio)In-Flight Measurement of the Aabsolute Energy Scale of the Fermi Large Area Telescope (M Pesce-Rollins)The Synergy between Astroparticle and Collider Physics in the Search for Dark Matter (James L Pinfold)PICASSO: Search for Dark Matter in the Spin-Dependent Sector (M-C Piro)Recent Results from VERITAS (John Quinn)Recent Results from the PAMELA Experiment (S B Ricciarini)First Results of LHCF; Very Forward Particles at LHC Collision (T Sako)Status and Recent Results from the CREAM Experiment (E S Seo, H S Ahn, P Bhoyar, J Eaton, O Ganel, J H Han, A Haque, K C Kim, M H Kim, M H Lee, S E Lee, L Lutz, A Malinin, O Ofoha, S S Ryu, B P Smith, A Vartanyan, P Walpole, J Wu, J H Yoo, Y S Yoon, T Anderson, N B Conklin, S Coutu, M Geske, S I Mognet, L Barbier, J T Link, J W Mitchell, A Barrau, M Bunerd, B Coste, L Derome, M Mangin-Brinet, A Putze, Y Sallaz-Damaz, R Bazer-Bachi, J J Beatty, T J Brandt, G Bigongiari, P Maestro and R Zei)On the Possibility of Registering UHE EAS Cherenkov Light by the TUS Detector (O P Shustova, N N Kalmykov and B A Khrenov)TeV Gamma-Rays from NGC 1275 Detected in 15 Year Observation of SHALON Telescope (V G Sinitsyna, S I Nikolsky and V Y Sinitsyna)Constraints on Extragalactic Background Light from Distant Quasars 3C454.3 (z = 0.859 and 1739+522 (z = 1.375) Detected by SHALON (V G Sinitsyna, S I Nikolsky and V Y Sinitsyna)Status of the High Altitude Water Cherenkov (HAWC) Gamma Ray Observatory (Wayne Springer)Light Nuclei and Isotope Abundances in Cosmic Rays. Results from AMS-01 (N Tomassetti)Cosmic Rays Propagation and Environment:The AMS-02 Proton Spectra and the Geomagnetic Field (P Bobik, M J Boschini, C Consolandi, S Della Torre, M Gervasi, D Grandi, K Kudela, S Pensotti and P G Rancoita)Stereo Observations of the Energetic Heavy Ions During the Minimum of Solar Cycle 23 (R Bučík, U Mall, A Korth and G M Mason)Electron and Positron Solar Modulation and Prediction for AMS02 (P Bobik, M J Boschini, C Consolandi, S Della Torre, M Gervasi, D Grandi, K Kudela, S Pensotti and P G Rancoita)How to Use Molecular Clouds to Study the Propagation of Cosmic Rays in the Galaxy (S Gabici)Proton Modulation in the Heliosphere for Different Solar Conditions and Prediction for AMS-02 (P Bobik, G Boella, M J Boschini, C Consolandi, S Della Torre, M Gervasi, D Grandi, K Kudela, E Memola, S Pensotti, P G Rancoita and M Tacconi)Proton and Antiproton Modulation in the Heliosphere for Different Solar Conditions and AMS-02 Measurements Prediction (P Bobik, M J Boschini, C Consolandi, S Della Torre, M Gervasi, D Grandi, K Kudela, S Pensotti and P G Rancoita)A Consistent Interpretation of Recent CR Nuclei and Electron Spectra (Giuseppe Di Bernardo, Carmelo Evoli, Daniele Gaggero, Dario Grasso, Luca Maccione and Mario Nicola Mazziotta)Cosmic Rays for Heliospheric Space Weather Storm Prediction (Frank Jansen and Jörg Behrens)Energetic Particles in the Magnetosphere of Earth: Selected Results and Problems (Karel Kudela, Leonid L Lazutin and Yuri I Logachev)Cosmic Rays of Leptons from Pulsars and Supernova Remnants (Roberto A Lineros)High Energy Phenomena in the Low Atmosphere; Particle Fluxes from Thunderstorm Clouds (Ashot Chilingarian and Bagrat Mailyan)The Cosmic-Ray Populations of Nearby Galaxies (P Martin)USINE: A New Public Cosmic Ray Propagation Code (Basic Phenomenology, Sample Results, and a Bit of USINE) (D Maurin)Propagation of Galactic Cosmic Rays and the AMS-02 Experiment (Miguel Pato, Dan Hooper and Melanie Simet)Galactic Cosmic Rays in the Dynamic Heliosphere (Marius Potgieter, Stefan Ferreira and Du Toit Strauss)A Markov Chain Monte Carlo Technique to Sample Transport and Source Parameters of Galactic Cosmic Rays (A Putze, L Derome, F Donato and D Maurin)PAMELA Through a Magnetic Lens (J P Roberts)Analysis of Possibility of Cosmic Rays Proton Anisotropy Phase and Amplitude and Electron Spectra Description at TeV-Region within the Bounds of the Same Set of Sources (Olga Strelnikova, Vladimir Ptuskin and Lyubov Sveshnikova)Interstellar Gamma Rays and Cosmic Rays: New Insights from FERMI-LAT and Integral (A W Strong)Energy Loss for Electrons in the Heliosphere and Local Interstellar Spectrum for Solar Modulation (P Bobik, G Boella, M J Boschini, C Consolandi, S Della Torre, M Gervasi, D Grandi, M Elmo, K Kudela, E Memola, S Pensotti, P G Rancoita, D Rozza and M Tacconi)Cosmic Rays from Astrophysical Sources:Cosmic Ray Acceleration in Supernova Remnants (P Blasi)γ-Rays from Heavy Nuclei Accelerated in Supernova Remnants (D Caprioli, P Blasi and E Amato)Anisotropies in the Cosmic-Ray Electron Spectrum: A Way to Discriminate between Exotic and Astrophysical Sources? (I Cernuda)Cosmic-Ray Electrons and Positrons from Gamma-Ray Pulsars (M Dormody)Galactic Electrons and Positrons at the Earth: New Estimate of the Primary and Secondary Fluxes (J Lavalle)The 'PAMELA Anomaly' Indicates a Nearby Cosmic Ray Accelerator (P Mertsch and S Sarkar)Observations of Intermediate Synchrotron Peaked Blazars with the Fermi-LAT (C Monte)Shock Acceleration in Partially Neutral Plasmas (G Morlino, E Amato, P Blasi and D Caprioli)Pulsar Electrons Detection in AMS-02 Experiment. Model Status and Discovery Potential (Jonathan Pochon)The CR Connection: UHE Primaries and Secondaries from UHECR Sources (A M Taylor)η Carinae: A Very Large Hadron Collider (R Walter, C Farnier & J-C Leyder)Cosmic Rays from Exotic Sources:Gamma Rays from Dark Matter (T Bringmann)Introducing CLUMPY: A Public Code for Gamma-Ray Emission from Dark Matter Annihilation in the Galaxy (C Combet, A Charbonnier and D Maurin)Cosmic Rays and Dark Matter Indirect Detection (Timur Delahaye)Neutrinos from Dark Matter (M H Reno)Charged Cosmic Rays from Dark Matter (P Salati)Gamma-Ray and Neutrino Signatures of Unstable Dark Matter (David Tran)Gamma-Ray Anisotropies from Decaying Dark Matter (C Weniger) Readership: Postgraduate students, researchers and engineers. Keywords:Astroparticle;Particle;Space Physics;Cosmic Ray Physics;Heliosphere;Dark Matter;Double-Beta DecayKey Features:Complete review of the fieldUp-to-date results and informationBroad vision for the future in the field, indication of future research direction

Book Perspectives On Supersymmetry

Download or read book Perspectives On Supersymmetry written by Gordon Kane and published by World Scientific. This book was released on 1998-07-03 with total page 504 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Supersymmetry is at an exciting stage of development. It extends the Standard Model of particle physics into a more powerful theory that both explains more and allows more questions to be addressed. Most important, it opens a window for studying and testing fundamental theories at the Planck scale. Experimentally we are finally entering the intensity and energy regions where superpartners are likely to be detected, and then studied. There has been progress in understanding the remarkable physics implications of supersymmetry, including the derivation of the Higgs mechanism, the unification of the Standard Model forces, cosmological connections such as a candidate for the cold dark matter of the universe and the scalar fields that drive inflation and their potential, the relationship to Planck scale theories, and more.While there are a number of reviews and books where the mathematical structure and uses of supersymmetry can be learned, there are few where the particle physics is the main focus. This book fills that gap. It begins with an excellent pedagogical introduction to the physics and methods and formalism of supersymmetry, by S Martin, which is accessible to anyone with a basic knowledge of the Standard Model of particle physics. Next is an overview of open questions by K Dienes and C Kolda, followed by chapters on topics ranging from how to detect superpartners to connections with Planck scale theories, by leading experts.This invaluable book will allow any interested physicist to understand the coming experimental and theoretical progress in supersymmetry, and will also help students and workers to quickly learn new aspects of supersymmetry they want to pursue.