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TOPIC: PAMELA experiment


L

Posts: 131433
Date:
RE: PAMELA experiment
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Title: New Measurement of the Antiproton-to-Proton Flux Ratio up to 100 GeV in the Cosmic Radiation
Authors: O. Adriani, G. C. Barbarino, G. A. Bazilevskaya, R. Bellotti, M. Boezio, E. A. Bogomolov, L. Bonechi, M. Bongi, V. Bonvicini, S. Bottai,2 A. Bruno, F. Cafagna, D. Campana, P. Carlson, M. Casolino, G. Castellini, M. P. De Pascale, G. De Rosa, D. Fedele, A. M. Galper, L. Grishantseva, P. Hofverberg, A. Leonov, S. V. Koldashov, S. Y. Krutkov, A. N. Kvashnin, V. Malvezzi, L. Marcelli, W. Menn, V. V. Mikhailov, M. Minori, E. Mocchiutti, M. Nagni, S. Orsi, G. Osteria, P. Papini, M. Pearce, P. Picozza, M. Ricci, S. B. Ricciarini, M. Simon, R. Sparvoli, P. Spillantini, Y. I. Stozhkov, E. Taddei, A. Vacchi, E. Vannuccini, G. Vasilyev, S. A. Voronov, Y. T. Yurkin, G. Zampa, N. Zampa, and V. G. Zverev

A new measurement of the cosmic-ray antiproton-to-proton flux ratio between 1 and 100 GeV is presented. The results were obtained with the PAMELA experiment, which was launched into low-Earth orbit on-board the Resurs-DK1 satellite on June 15th 2006. During 500 days of data collection a total of about 1000 antiprotons have been identified, including 100 above an energy of 20 GeV. The high-energy results are a tenfold improvement in statistics with respect to all previously published data. The data follow the trend expected from secondary production calculations and significantly constrain contributions from exotic sources, e.g., dark matter particle annihilations.

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Posts: 131433
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Annihilating Dark Matter
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Title: Neutrino Signals from Annihilating/Decaying Dark Matter in the Light of Recent Measurements of Cosmic Ray Electron/Positron Fluxes
Authors: Junji Hisano, Masahiro Kawasaki, Kazunori Kohri, Kazunori Nakayama
(Version v3)

The excess of cosmic-ray electron and positron fluxes measured by the PAMELA satellite and ATIC balloon experiments may be interpreted as the signals of the dark matter annihilation or decay into leptons. In this letter we show that the dark matter annihilation/decay which reproduces the electron/positron excess may yield a significant amount of high-energy neutrinos from the Galactic center. In the case, future kilometre-square size experiments may confirm such a scenario, or even the Super-Kamiokande results already put constraints on some dark matter models.

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Posts: 131433
Date:
PAMELA and ATIC Signals
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Title: The PAMELA and ATIC Signals From Kaluza-Klein Dark Matter
Authors: Dan Hooper, Kathryn Zurek

In this letter, we study the possibility that Kaluza-Klein dark matter in a model with one universal extra dimension is responsible for the recent observations of the PAMELA and ATIC experiments. In this model, the dark matter particles annihilate largely to charged leptons, which enables them to produce a spectrum of cosmic ray electrons and positrons consistent with the PAMELA and ATIC measurements. To normalise to the observed signal, however, large boost factors (~10^3) are required. Despite these large boost factors and significant annihilation to hadronic modes (35%), we find that the constraints from cosmic ray antiproton measurements can be satisfied. Relic abundance considerations in this model force us to consider a rather specific range of masses (approximately 600-900 GeV) which is very similar to the range required to generate the ATIC spectral feature. The results presented here can also be used as a benchmark for model-independent constraints on dark matter annihilation to hadronic modes.

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Posts: 131433
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RE: PAMELA experiment
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Title: PAMELA/ATIC anomaly from the meta-stable extra dark matter component and the leptophilic Yukawa interaction
Authors: Bumseok Kyae

We present a supersymmetric model with two dark matter (DM) components explaining the galactic positron excess observed by PAMELA/HEAT and ATIC/PPB-BETS: One is the conventional lightest supersymmetric particle (LSP) \chi, and the other is a TeV scale meta-stable neutral singlet N_D, which is a Dirac fermion (N,N^c). In this model, N_D decays dominantly into \chi e^+e^- through an R parity preserving dimension 6 operator with the life time \tau_N ~ 10^{26} sec. We introduce a pair of vector-like superheavy SU(2) lepton doublets (L,L^c) and lepton singlets (E,E^c). The dimension 6 operator leading to the N_D decay is generated from the leptophilic Yukawa interactions by W \supset Ne^cE+L^ch_uE+Lh_de^c with the dimensionless couplings of order unity, and a gauge interaction by {\cal L} \supset g'\tilde{e}^{c*}e^c\chi + h.c. The superheavy masses of the vector-like leptons (~ 10^{16} GeV) are responsible for the longevity of N_D. The low energy field spectrum in this model is just the MSSM fields and N_D. Even for the case that the portion of N_D is much smaller than that of \chi in the total DM density [{\cal O}(10^{-10}) \lesssim n_D/n_\chi], the observed positron excess can be explained with a relatively light mass of E and E^c (10^{11} GeV \lesssim M_E \lesssim 10^{16} GeV). The smallness of the electron mass is also explained in this framework. This model is easily embedded in the flipped SU(5) grand unification, which is a leptophilic unified theory.

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Posts: 131433
Date:
PAMELA and ATIC experiments
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Title: CMSSM Spectroscopy in light of PAMELA and ATIC
Authors: Ilia Gogoladze, Rizwan Khalid, Qaisar Shafi, Hasan Yuksel
(Version v2)

Dark matter neutralinos in the constrained minimal supersymmetric model (CMSSM) may account for the recent cosmic ray electron and positron observations reported by the PAMELA and ATIC experiments either through self annihilation or via decay. However, to achieve this, both scenarios require new physics beyond the 'standard' CMSSM, and a unified explanation of the two experiments suggests a neutralino mass of order 700 GeV - 2 TeV. A relatively light neutralino with mass around 100 GeV (300 GeV) can accommodate the PAMELA but not the ATIC observations based on a model of annihilating (decaying) neutralinos. We study the implications of these scenarios for Higgs and sparticle spectroscopy in the CMSSM and highlight some benchmark points. An estimate of neutrino flux expected from the annihilating and decaying neutralino scenarios is provided.

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Posts: 131433
Date:
PAMELA data
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Title: White dwarf axions, PAMELA data, and flipped-SU(5)
Authors: Kyu Jung Bae, Ji-Haeng Huh, Jihn E. Kim, Bumseok Kyae, Raoul D. Viollier
(Version v2)

Recently, there are two hints arising from physics beyond the standard model. One is a possible energy loss mechanism due to emission of very weakly interacting light particles from white dwarf stars, with a coupling strength ~ 0.7x10^{-13}, and another is the high energy positrons observed by the PAMELA satellite experiment. We construct a supersymmetric flipped-SU(5) model, SU(5)xU(1)_X with appropriate additional symmetries, [U(1)_H]_{gauge}x[U(1)_RxU(1)_\Gamma]_{global}xZ_2, such that these are explained by a very light electrophilic axion of mass 0.5 meV from the spontaneously broken U(1)_\Gamma and two component cold dark matters from Z_2 parity. We show that in the flipped-SU(5) there exists a basic mechanism for allowing excess positrons through the charged SU(2) singlet leptons, but not allowing anti-proton excess due to the absence of the SU(2) singlet quarks. We show the discovery potential of the charged SU(2) singlet E at the LHC experiments by observing the electron and positron spectrum. With these symmetries, we also comment on the mass hierarchy between the top and bottom quarks.

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Posts: 131433
Date:
PAMELA Positrons
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Title: Is the PAMELA Positron Excess Winos?
Authors: Phill Grajek, Gordon Kane, Dan Phalen, Aaron Pierce, Scott Watson

Recently the PAMELA satellite-based experiment reported an excess of galactic positrons that could be a signal of annihilating dark matter. The PAMELA data may admit an interpretation as a signal from a wino-like LSP of mass about 200 GeV, normalised to the local relic density, and annihilating mainly into W-bosons. This possibility requires the current conventional estimate for the energy loss rate of positrons be too large by roughly a factor of five. Data from anti-protons and gamma rays also provide tension with this interpretation, but there are significant astrophysical uncertainties associated with their propagation. It is not unreasonable to take this well-motivated candidate seriously, at present, in part because it can be tested in several ways soon. The forthcoming PAMELA data on higher energy positrons and the FGST (formerly GLAST) data, should provide important clues as to whether this scenario is correct. If correct, the wino interpretation implies a cosmological history in which the dark matter does not originate in thermal equilibrium.

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Posts: 131433
Date:
PAMELA experiment
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Title: Dissecting Pamela (and ATIC) with Occam's Razor: existing, well-known Pulsars naturally account for the "anomalous" Cosmic-Ray Electron and Positron Data
Authors: Stefano Profumo (University of California, Santa Cruz)

We argue that both the positron fraction measured by PAMELA and the peculiar spectral features reported in the total differential electron-positron flux measured by ATIC have a very natural explanation in electron-positron pairs produced by nearby pulsars. We show that the greatly improved quality of current data allow us to reverse-engineer the problem: given the regions of pulsar parameter space favoured by PAMELA and by ATIC, are there known pulsars that naturally explain the data? We address this question by (1) outlining simple theoretical models for estimating the energy output, the diffusion setup and the injection spectral index of electron-positron pairs, and by (2) considering all known pulsars (as given in the ATNF catalogue). It appears unlikely that a single pulsar be responsible for both the PAMELA result and for the ATIC excess, although two sources are enough to naturally explain both of the experimental results. We list several candidate pulsars that can individually or coherently contribute to explain the PAMELA and ATIC data. We point out that Fermi-LAT will play a decisive role in the very near future, by (1) providing us with an exquisite measurement of the electron-positron flux that will make it possible to distinguish between various pulsar scenarios, and by (2) unveiling the existence of as yet undetected gamma-ray pulsars that can significantly contribute to the local electron-positron flux.

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Posts: 131433
Date:
PAMELA and ATIC results
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Title: Prospects for Detecting Neutrino Signals from Annihilating/Decaying Dark Matter to Account for the PAMELA and ATIC results
Authors: Jia Liu, Peng-fei Yin, Shou-hua Zhu

Recent PAMELA and ATIC data shows positron fraction has an excess above several GeV while anti-proton not. ATIC data shows electron and positron flux have a bump from 300GeV to 800GeV. Both annihilating dark matter (DM) with large boost factor and decaying dark matter with life time around  10^{26} s can account for the PAMELA and ATIC results if their main products are leptons. In this work, we have studied the neutrino flux from annihilating/decaying DM and calculated final muon rate in the neutrino telescopes such as Antares and IceCube. We find that both of the neutrino signals from Galactic Center (GC) in annihilating/decaying DM scenarios are significant for heavy DM and Super-K can place limits on them, especially for annihilating DM. With good angular resolution, Antares and IceCube can discover the neutrino signal from GC and subhalo respectively in annihilating DM scenario but difficult for decaying DM.

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Posts: 131433
Date:
RE: PAMELA experiment
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Title: PAMELA and dark matter
Authors: V. Barger, W.-Y. Keung, D. Marfatia, G. Shaughnessy
(Version v2)

Assuming that the positron excess in PAMELA satellite data is a consequence of annihilations of cold dark matter, we consider from a model-independent perspective if the data show a preference for the spin of dark matter. We then perform a general analysis of annihilations into two-body final states to determine what weighted combination of channels best describes the data.

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