CWRU PAT Coffee Agenda

Tuesdays 10:30 - 11:30 | Fridays 11:30 - 12:30

+2 Testing Quantum Black Holes with Gravitational Waves.

jtd55 +1 gds6 +1

+1 Determining $H_0$ with Bayesian hyper-parameters.

cjc5 +1

+1 Light Dark Matter in Superfluid Helium: Detection with Multi-excitation Production.

gds6 +1

+1 Cosmology with Galaxy Cluster Phase Spaces.

gds6 +1

+1 Discovery of Gamma-Ray Emission from the X-shaped Bulge of the Milky Way.

gds6 +1

Showing votes from 2016-11-18 12:30 to 2016-11-22 11:30 | Next meeting is Tuesday May 26th, 10:30 am.

users

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astro-ph.CO

  • Light Dark Matter in Superfluid Helium: Detection with Multi-excitation Production.- [PDF] - [Article]

    Simon Knapen, Tongyan Lin, Kathryn M. Zurek
     

    We examine in depth a recent proposal to utilize superfluid helium for direct detection of sub-MeV mass dark matter. For sub-keV recoil energies, nuclear scattering events in liquid helium primarily deposit energy into long-lived phonon and roton quasiparticle excitations. If the energy thresholds of the detector can be reduced to the meV scale, then dark matter as light as ~MeV can be reached with ordinary nuclear recoils. If, on the other hand, two or more quasiparticle excitations are directly produced in the dark matter interaction, the kinematics of the scattering allows sensitivity to dark matter as light as ~keV at the same energy resolution. We present in detail the theoretical framework for describing excitations in superfluid helium, using it to calculate the rate for the leading dark matter scattering interaction, where an off-shell phonon splits into two or more higher-momentum excitations. We validate our analytic results against the measured and simulated dynamic response of superfluid helium. Finally, we apply this formalism to the case of a kinetically mixed hidden photon in the superfluid, both with and without an external electric field to catalyze the processes.

  • Cosmology with Galaxy Cluster Phase Spaces.- [PDF] - [Article]

    Alejo Stark, Christopher J. Miller, Dragan Huterer
     

    We present a novel approach to constrain accelerating cosmologies with galaxy cluster phase spaces. With the Fisher matrix formalism we forecast constraints on the cosmological parameters that describe the cosmological expansion history. We find that our probe has the potential of providing constraints comparable to, or even stronger than, those from other cosmological probes. More specifically, with 1000 (100) clusters uniformly distributed in redshift between $ 0 \leq z \leq 0.8$, after applying a conservative $40\%$ mass scatter prior on each cluster and marginalizing over all other parameters, we forecast $1\sigma$ constraints on the dark energy equation of state $w$ and matter density parameter $\Omega_M$ of $\sigma_w = 0.161 (0.508)$ and $\sigma_{\Omega_M} = 0.001 (0.005)$ in a flat universe. Assuming the same galaxy cluster parameter priors and adding a prior on the Hubble constant we can achieve tight constraints on the CPL parametrization of the dark energy equation of state parameters $w_0$ and $w_a$ with just 100 clusters: $\sigma_{w_0} = 0.10$ and $\sigma_{w_a} = 0.93$. Dropping the assumption of flatness and assuming $w=-1$ we also attain competitive constraints on the matter and dark energy density parameters: $\sigma_{\Omega_M} = 0.072$ and $\sigma_{\Omega_{\Lambda}} = 0.114$ for 100 clusters uniformly distributed between $ 0 \leq z \leq 0.6$. We also discuss various observational strategies for tightening constraints in both the near and far future.

astro-ph.HE

  • Discovery of Gamma-Ray Emission from the X-shaped Bulge of the Milky Way.- [PDF] - [Article]

    Oscar Macias, Chris Gordon, Roland M. Crocker, Brendan Coleman, Dylan Paterson, Shunsaku Horiuchi, Martin Pohl
     

    An anomalous signal has been found in Fermi Gamma-Ray Large Area Telescope data covering the center of the Galaxy. Given its morphological and spectral characteristics, this "Galactic Center Excess" is ascribable to self-annihilation of dark matter particles. We report on an analysis that exploits hydrodynamical modeling to register the position of interstellar gas associated with diffuse Galactic $\gamma$-ray emission. Our improved analysis reveals that the excess $\gamma$-rays are spatially correlated with both the X-shaped stellar over-density in the Galactic bulge and the nuclear stellar bulge. Given these correlations, we argue that the excess is not a dark matter phenomenon but rather associated with the stellar population of the X-bulge and the nuclear bulge.

  • Testing Quantum Black Holes with Gravitational Waves.- [PDF] - [Article]

    Valentino F. Foit, Matthew Kleban
     

    We argue that near-future detections of gravity waves from merging black hole binaries will either confirm or conclusively rule out a long-standing proposal, originally due Bekenstein and Mukhanov, that the areas of black hole horizons are quantized in integer multiples of the Planck area times an O(1) constant \alpha. A single measurement of the "ring down" phase after a binary merger, if consistent with the predictions of classical general relativity, will rule out most or all (depending on the spin of the hole) of the extant proposals in the literature for the value of \alpha. A measurement of two such events for final black holes with substantially different spins will rule out the proposal for any \alpha.

astro-ph.GA

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astro-ph.IM

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gr-qc

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hep-ph

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hep-th

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hep-ex

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quant-ph

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other

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