Springer Proceedings in Physics

Springer Proceedings in Physics

Springer Proceedings in Physics Volume 148 For further volumes: http://www.springer.com/series/361 David Cline Editor Sources and Detection of Dark Matter and Dark Energy in the Universe Proceedings of the 10th UCLA Symposium on Sources and Detection of Dark Matter and Dark Energy in the Universe, February 22-24, 2012, Marina del Rey, California Editor David Cline UCLA Physics & Astronomy Los Angeles , USA ISSN 0930-8989 ISSN 1867-4941 (electronic) ISBN 978-94-007-7240-3 ISBN 978-94-007-7241-0 (eBook) DOI 10.1007/978-94-007-7241-0 Springer Dordrecht Heidelberg New York London Library of Congress Control Number: 2013955385 © Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht 2013 This work is subject to copyright. All rights are reserved by the Publisher, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, specifi cally the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on microfi lms or in any other physical way, and transmission or information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafter developed. Exempted from this legal reservation are brief excerpts in connection with reviews or scholarly analysis or material supplied specifi cally for the purpose of being entered and executed on a computer system, for exclusive use by the purchaser of the work. Duplication of this publication or parts thereof is permitted only under the provisions of the Copyright Law of the Publisher’s location, in its current version, and permission for use must always be obtained from Springer. Permissions for use may be obtained through RightsLink at the Copyright Clearance Center. Violations are liable to prosecution under the respective Copyright Law. The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc. in this publication does not imply, even in the absence of a specifi c statement, that such names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and therefore free for general use. While the advice and information in this book are believed to be true and accurate at the date of publication, neither the authors nor the editors nor the publisher can accept any legal responsibility for any errors or omissions that may be made. The publisher makes no warranty, express or implied, with respect to the material contained herein. Printed on acid-free paper Springer is part of Springer Science+Business Media (www.springer.com) Contents Part I Theoretical Precision: Cosmology and Dark Matter 1 Radiative Natural Supersymmetry with Mixed Axion/Higgsino Cold Dark Matter ........................................................ 3 Howard Baer 2 Finite Temperature Density Profi le in SFDM ....................................... 17 Victor H. Robles and T. Matos 3 An Argument for Axion Dark Matter ................................................... 25 Pierre Sikivie 4 Supersymmetric Dark Matter at XENON100 and the LHC: No-Scale F -SU(5) Stringy Correlations ...................... 31 Tianjun Li, James A. Maxin, Dimitri V. Nanopoulos, and Joel W. Walker 5 Approaches on Self-Gravitating Bose-Einstein Condensates ............. 39 L. Arturo Ureña-López 6 Search for Turbulent Gas Through Interstellar Scintillation ............. 45 M. Moniez, R. Ansari, F. Habibi, and S. Rahvar Part II Search for Dark Matter – LHC, CMB, Fermi LAT 7 Light Sneutrino Dark Matter in the NMSSM ...................................... 53 David G. Cerdeño, Ji-Haeng Huh, Miguel Peiró, and Osamu Seto 8 The Missing Energy Events at the LHC and Implications for Dark Matter Search .......................................................................... 59 Valery P. Andreev 9 Where Is SUSY? ...................................................................................... 63 Wim de Boer v vi Contents 10 Bounds on Dark Matter from CMB Observations .............................. 67 Aravind Natarajan 11 Searches for Galactic Dark Matter Substructure with the Fermi LAT ................................................................................ 73 Alex Drlica-Wagner Part III Current Search Results and New Detectors 12 Dark Matter Annual Modulation Results by DAMA/LIBRA ............ 79 R. Bernabei, P. Belli, F. Cappella, V. Caracciolo, R. Cerulli, C.J. Dai, A. d’Angelo, A. Di Marco, H.L. He, A. Incicchitti, X.H. Ma, F. Montecchia, X.D. Sheng, R.G. Wang, and Z.P. Ye 13 The XENON100 Detector .......................................................................... 87 Paul Scovell 14 The XENON1T Dark Matter Search Experiment .................................. 93 Elena Aprile 15 The SuperCDMS Experimental Program ............................................ 97 Enectali Figueroa-Feliciano 16 The Search for Antideuterons with Gaps .............................................. 105 Ph. von Doetinchem 17 Fits to Light WIMPs ............................................................................... 111 Graciela Gelmini 18 Directional Detection of Galactic Dark Matter .................................... 117 F. Mayet, J. Billard, and D. Santos 19 Simulation of Cosmogenic and Radioactive Backgrounds for the CoGeNT Detector ....................................................................... 123 M.S. Kos 20 The Status of the Search for Low Mass WIMPs: 2012 ........................ 129 David B. Cline List of Talks from Dark Matter 2012 Joel Primack (UC Santa Cruz) – ΛCDM – triumphs and tribulations Elliott Bloom (SLAC) – Using the Fermi large area telescope to search for dark matter via indirect detection: an overview Rick Gaitskell (Brown) – Overview of experimental direct dark matter search Stefan Schael (RWTH Aachen Univ.): Status of the AMS-02 experiment on the ISS (23.4 MB) Paolo Gondolo (Univ. of Utah) – Theory of low mass WIMPs Katherine Freese (Univ. of Michigan) – Dark stars Lisa Randall (Harvard) – New models of dark matter Mirko Boezio (INFN Trieste) – Dark matter indirect search in fi ve years of PAMELA in orbit Neelima Sehgal (Princeton) – Understanding dark energy using the cosmic micro- wave background Etienne Pointecouteau (IRAP) – Constraints on dark matter from the mass distribu- tion in clusters of galaxies Gregory Tarlé (Univ. of Michigan) – Big Baryon Spectroscopic Survey (BigBOSS) Doug Spolyar (FNAL) – An overview of dark stars Chris Burns (Carnegie Observatories) – Using type Ia supernovae to shed light on dark energy Aaron Roodman (SLAC) – Review of the Dark Energy Survey Ina Sarcevic (Univ. of Arizona) – Limits on self-interacting dark matter Carsten Rott (Ohio State Univ/CCAPP) – New approaches in dark matter searches with neutrino telescopes Amol Upadhye (ANL) – How dark is dark energy? The Gamme V-CHASE search for photon - coupled chameleon dark energy Jeremy Mardon (Stanford) – Direct detection of MeV to GeV mass dark matter Chung Kao (Univ. of Oklahoma) – Implications of LHC Higgs searches for the neutralino dark matter Tonatiuh Matos (Centro de Investigacion y de Estudios Avanzados del IPN) – The status of the scalar fi eld dark matter model vii viii List of Talks from Dark Matter 2012 Marc Moniez (Laboratoire de l’accelerateur lineaire, Universite d’Orsay) – Search for turbulent hidden gas through interstellar scintillation Marieangela Lisanti (Princeton) – Direct detection of dark matter debris fl ows Luis Urena (Univ. of Guanajuato) – Galaxy halos from cosmological Bose- Einstein condensates Josef Pradler (Perimeter Institute) – Statistical tests of noise and harmony in dark matter modulation signals Valeri Andreev (UCLA) – The search for missing energy events at the LHC and implications for dark matter search (Atlas and CMS) Dimitri Nanopoulos (Texas A/&M University) – The race for supersymmetric dark matter at XENON 100 and the LHC – stringy correlations from no-scale F-SU(5) Osamu Seto (Hokkai-Gakuen University) – Light sneutrino dark matter in the NMSSM Howard Baer (Univ. of Oklahoma) – Mixed axion/LSP dark matter Ian Shoemaker (LANL) – Unitarity and monojet bounds on models of dark matter Wim de Boer (Karlsruhe Inst. of Technology) – LHC and direct dark matter detection Mani Tripathi (UC Davis) – Recent results from a search for dark matter pro- duction in the CMS experiment Rosemary Wyse (Johns Hopkins) – How massive are the least massive galaxies? Matthew Walker (Harvard) – Dwarf galaxies as tests of cold dark matter Alexander Kusenko (UCLA) – Dark matter and neutrino masses George Fuller (UC San Diego) – Sterile neutrinos – dilution, dark radiation, BBN, and dark matter Aravind Natarajan (Carnegie Mellon Univ.) – Bounds on dark matter from CMB observations Annika Peter (UC Irvine) – Galactic archaeology with direct-detection experiments Miguel A. Sanchez-Conde (KIPAC/SLAC) – Nearby dwarf galaxies, local gal- axy clusters and the role of halo substructure Ami Katz (Boston Univ.) – Model-independent framework for analyzing direct detection experiments Pierre Sikivie (Univ. of Florida) – Bose-Einstein condensation of dark matter axions Philip von Doetinchem (UC Berkeley) – The search for anti-deuterons with GAPS Gianpaolo Carosi (LLNL) – Hunting the dark matter axion (and other exotic crea- tures) with the ADMX experiment Savvas M. Koushiappas (Brown Univ.) – Exclusion of canonical WIMPs using a joint analysis of Fermi-LAT data from dwarf galaxies Alex Drlica-Wagner (Stanford) – Search for dark matter substructure with the Fermi-LAT Simona Murgia (SLAC) – Galactic Center measurements with Fermi Miguel A. Sanchez-Conde (KIPAC/SLAC) – The Fermi/LAT Extragalactic dif- fuse background and its dark

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