3,593 research outputs found
ALP Conversion and the Soft X-ray Excess in the Outskirts of the Coma Cluster
It was recently found that the soft X-ray excess in the center of the Coma
cluster can be fitted by conversion of axion-like-particles (ALPs) of a cosmic
axion background (CAB) to photons. We extend this analysis to the outskirts of
Coma, including regions up to 5 Mpc from the center of the cluster. We extract
the excess soft X-ray flux from ROSAT All-Sky Survey data and compare it to the
expected flux from ALP to photon conversion of a CAB. The soft X-ray excess
both in the center and the outskirts of Coma can be simultaneously fitted by
ALP to photon conversion of a CAB. Given the uncertainties of the cluster
magnetic field in the outskirts we constrain the parameter space of the CAB. In
particular, an upper limit on the CAB mean energy and a range of allowed
ALP-photon couplings are derived.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figure
A 3.55 keV line from : predictions for cool-core and non-cool-core clusters
We further study a scenario in which a 3.55 keV X-ray line arises from decay
of dark matter to an axion-like particle (ALP), that subsequently converts to a
photon in astrophysical magnetic fields. We perform numerical simulations of
Gaussian random magnetic fields with radial scaling of the magnetic field
magnitude with the electron density, for both cool-core `Perseus' and
non-cool-core `Coma' electron density profiles. Using these, we quantitatively
study the resulting signal strength and morphology for cool-core and
non-cool-core clusters. Our study includes the effects of fields of view that
cover only the central part of the cluster, the effects of offset pointings on
the radial decline of signal strength and the effects of dividing clusters into
annuli. We find good agreement with current data and make predictions for
future analyses and observations.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figure
"Big" Divisor D3/D7 Swiss Cheese Phenomenology
We review progress made over the past couple of years in the field of Swiss
Cheese Phenomenology involving a mobile space-time filling D3-brane and
stack(s) of fluxed D7-branes wrapping the "big" (as opposed to the "small")
divisor in (the orientifold of a) Swiss-Cheese Calabi-Yau. The topics reviewed
include reconciliation of large volume cosmology and phenomenology, evaluation
of soft supersymmetry breaking parameters, one-loop RG-flow equations'
solutions for scalar masses, obtaining fermionic (possibly first two
generations' quarks/leptons) mass scales in the O(MeV-GeV)-regime as well as
(first two generations') neutrino masses (and their one-loop RG flow) of around
an eV. The heavy sparticles and the light fermions indicate the possibility of
"split SUSY" large volume scenario.Comment: Invited review for MPLA, 14 pages, LaTe
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