Xiaolei Su, Jonathon A. Ditlev, E. Hui et al.
Hasil untuk "hep-lat"
Menampilkan 20 dari ~153033 hasil · dari CrossRef, DOAJ, Semantic Scholar
S. Plymate, L. Matej, Robert E. Jones et al.
Miguel E. Gomez, Michael L. Wells
Jeffrey Liu, Farzin Eshaghi, Muhammad Baraa Hammami
M. Schouten, M. Van Santen, L.M. KAGER
Osamah Al-obaidi, Sheila Cheng, Emily Nash
Sachiyo Onishi, Masaya Kubota, Masahito Shimizu
Agung Sandi Ramadan, Cahyo Wibisono Nugroho
Isabel Hujoel
Yuki Terashima, Eisuke Takamasu, Kota Shimada
Hinpetch Daungsupawong, Viroj Wiwanitkit
T. Bringmann, Xiaoyuan Huang, A. Ibarra et al.
A commonly encountered obstacle in indirect searches for galactic dark matter is how to disentangle possible signals from astrophysical backgrounds. Given that such signals are most likely subdominant, the search for pronounced spectral features plays a key role for indirect detection experiments; monochromatic gamma-ray lines or similar features related to internal bremsstrahlung, in particular, provide smoking gun signatures. We perform a dedicated search for the latter in the data taken by the Fermi gamma-ray space telescope during its first 43 months. To this end, we use a new adaptive procedure to select optimal target regions that takes into account both standard and contracted dark matter profiles. The behaviour of our statistical method is tested by a subsampling analysis of the full sky data and found to reproduce the theoretical expectations very well. The limits on the dark matter annihilation cross-section that we derive are stronger than what can be obtained from the observation of dwarf galaxies and, at least for the model considered here, collider searches. While these limits are still not quite strong enough to probe annihilation rates expected for thermally produced dark matter, future prospects to do so are very good. In fact, we already find a weak indication, with a significance of 3.1σ (4.3σ) when (not) taking into account the look-elsewhere effect, for an internal bremsstrahlung-like signal that would correspond to a dark matter mass of ~150 GeV; the same signal is also well fitted by a gamma-ray line at around 130 GeV. Although this would be a fascinating possibility, we caution that a much more dedicated analysis and additional data will be necessary to rule out or confirm this option.
Angela Wu, Danielle Brown, Uni Wong
Kimitoshi Kubo, Kazumi Ogane, Koichi Haraguchi
Lawrence J. Brandt
Yusuke Nomoto, Makoto Furihata, Taro Osada
Tokunbo Ajayi, Gina Moon, Shruti Mony
Tianyi Wang, Piers D. Mitchell
Halaman 13 dari 7652