11 research outputs found
Positrons and antiprotons from inert doublet model dark matter
In the framework of the Inert Doublet Model, a very simple extension of the
Standard Model, we study the production and propagation of antimatter in cosmic
rays coming from annihilation of a scalar dark matter particle. We consider
three benchmark candidates, all consistent with the WMAP cosmic abundance and
existing direct detection experiments, and confront the predictions of the
model with the recent PAMELA, ATIC and HESS data. For a light candidate, M_{DM}
= 10 GeV, we argue that the positron and anti-proton fluxes may be large, but
still consistent with expected backgrounds, unless there is an enhancement
(boost factor) in the local density of dark matter. There is also a substantial
anti-deuteron flux which might be observable by future experiments. For a
candidate with M_{DM} = 70 GeV, the contribution to positron and anti-proton
fluxes is much smaller than the expected backgrounds. Even if a boost factor is
invoked to enhance the signals, the candidate is unable to explain the observed
positron and anti-proton excesses. Finally, for a heavy candidate, M_{DM} = 10
TeV, it is possible to fit the PAMELA excess (but, unfortunately, not the ATIC
one) provided there is a large enhancement, either in the local density of dark
matter or through the Sommerfeld effect.Comment: 17 pages ; v2: matches JCAP published versio
Charge Asymmetric Cosmic Rays as a probe of Flavor Violating Asymmetric Dark Matter
The recently introduced cosmic sum rules combine the data from PAMELA and
Fermi-LAT cosmic ray experiments in a way that permits to neatly investigate
whether the experimentally observed lepton excesses violate charge symmetry.
One can in a simple way determine universal properties of the unknown component
of the cosmic rays. Here we attribute a potential charge asymmetry to the dark
sector. In particular we provide models of asymmetric dark matter able to
produce charge asymmetric cosmic rays. We consider spin zero, spin one and spin
one-half decaying dark matter candidates. We show that lepton flavor violation
and asymmetric dark matter are both required to have a charge asymmetry in the
cosmic ray lepton excesses. Therefore, an experimental evidence of charge
asymmetry in the cosmic ray lepton excesses implies that dark matter is
asymmetric.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures. Revised version to match the published versio
High Energy Cosmic Rays from Decaying Supersymmetric Dark Matter
Motivated by the recent PAMELA and ATIC results, we calculate the electron
and positron fluxes from the decay of lightest-superparticle (LSP) dark matter.
We assume that the LSP is the dominant component of dark matter, and consider
the case that the R-parity is very weakly violated so that the lifetime of the
LSP becomes of the order of 10^26 sec. We will see that, with such a choice of
the lifetime, the cosmic-ray electron and positron from the decay can be the
source of the anomalous electron and positron fluxes observed by PAMELA and
ATIC. We consider the possibilities that the LSP is the gravitino, the lightest
neutralino, and scalar neutrino, and discuss how the resultant fluxes depend on
the dark-matter model. We also discuss the fluxes of gamma-ray and anti-proton,
and show that those fluxes can be consistent with the observed value in the
parameter region where the PAMELA and ATIC anomalies are explained.Comment: 34 pages, 20 figures, published versio
Dark matter and collider phenomenology of split-UED
We explicitly show that split-universal extra dimension (split-UED), a
recently suggested extension of universal extra dimension (UED) model, can
nicely explain recent anomalies in cosmic-ray positrons and electrons observed
by PAMELA and ATIC/PPB-BETS. Kaluza-Klein (KK) dark matters mainly annihilate
into leptons because the hadronic branching fraction is highly suppressed by
large KK quark masses and the antiproton flux agrees very well with the
observation where no excess is found . The flux of cosmic gamma-rays from pion
decay is also highly suppressed and hardly detected in low energy region (E<20
GeV). Collider signatures of colored KK particles at the LHC, especially q_1
q_1 production, are studied in detail. Due to the large split in masses of KK
quarks and other particles, hard p_T jets and missing E_T are generated, which
make it possible to suppress the standard model background and discover the
signals.Comment: 32 pages, 15 figure
Decaying dark matter in light of the PAMELA and Fermi LAT data
A series of experiments measuring high-energy cosmic rays have recently
reported strong indications for the existence of an excess of high-energy
electrons and positrons. If interpreted in terms of the decay of dark matter
particles, the PAMELA measurements of the positron fraction and the Fermi LAT
measurements of the total electron-plus-positron flux restrict the possible
decaying dark matter scenarios to a few cases. Analyzing different decay
channels in a model-independent manner, and adopting a conventional diffusive
reacceleration model for the background fluxes of electrons and positrons, we
identify some promising scenarios of dark matter decay and calculate the
predictions for the diffuse extragalactic gamma-ray flux, including the
contributions from inverse Compton scattering with the interstellar radiation
field.Comment: 27 pages, 14 figures - Version accepted for publication in JCAP.
Clarifications added on the underlying astrophysical assumptions. Fig. 4 and
9 adde
Probing Gravitino Dark Matter with PAMELA and Fermi
We analyze the cosmic-ray signatures of decaying gravitino dark matter in a
model independent way based on an operator analysis. Thermal leptogenesis and
universal boundary conditions at the GUT scale restrict the gravitino mass to
be below 600 GeV. Electron and positron fluxes from gravitino decays, together
with the standard GALPROP background, cannot explain both, the PAMELA positron
fraction and the electron + positron flux recently measured by Fermi LAT. For
gravitino dark matter, the observed fluxes require astrophysical sources. The
measured antiproton flux allows for a sizable contribution of decaying
gravitinos to the gamma-ray spectrum, in particular a line at an energy below
300 GeV. Future measurements of the gamma-ray flux will provide important
constraints on possible signatures of decaying gravitino dark matter at the
LHC.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures. v3: published versio
Cosmic ray electron and positron excesses from a fourth generation heavy Majorana neutrino
Revisit of cosmic ray antiprotons from dark matter annihilation with updated constraints on the background model from AMS-02 and collider data
Cosmic Rays from Leptophilic Dark Matter Decay via Kinetic Mixing.
If interpreted in terms of decaying dark matter, the steep rise in the
positron fraction of cosmic rays above 10 GeV, as observed by the PAMELA
experiment, suggests an underlying production mechanism that favors leptonic
channels. We consider a scenario where a portion of the dark matter is made of
the gauginos of an unbroken hidden-sector U(1), which interact with the visible
sector only through a tiny kinetic mixing. The second component of the dark
matter is made of neutralinos, and depending on the mass spectrum, the lightest
neutralino or the hidden gaugino becomes unstable and subject to decay. We
analyze the cosmic rays, namely the contributions to the positron, the
extragalactic gamma-ray and the antiproton flux, which potentially result from
these decays and demonstrate that the production of antiprotons can be
naturally suppressed. Furthermore, we briefly discuss the apparent double-peak
structure of the ATIC data in light of cascade-decaying hidden gauginos, as
well as possible signatures at Fermi.Comment: 29 pages, 5 figure
