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A Search for Weakly Interacting Particles with the Cryogenic Dark Matter Search Experiment
Author(s) -
T. Bruch
Publication year - 2010
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/1247695
Subject(s) - dark matter , physics , wimp , flux (metallurgy) , dark matter halo , astrophysics , annihilation , neutrino , galactic halo , weakly interacting massive particles , muon , light dark matter , baryonic dark matter , scalar field dark matter , halo , astronomy , particle physics , cosmology , dark energy , galaxy , materials science , metallurgy
Dark matter particles cannot only be detected directly in laboratories, but also indirectly by their annihilation products. Previous predictions of the neutrino flux from WIMP annihilation in the Earth and the Sun have assumed that galactic dark matter is distributed according to the SHM. Although the dark disc has a local density comparable to the dark halo, its higher phase space density at low velocities greatly enhances capture rates in the Sun and Earth. For typical dark disc properties, the resulting muon flux from the Earth is increased by three orders of magnitude over the SHM, while for the Sun the increase is one order of magnitude. This significantly increases the prospects of neutrino telescopes to fix or constrain parameters in WIMP models. The flux from the Earth is extremely sensitive to the detailed properties of the dark disc, while the flux from the Sun is more robust.

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