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Dan Hooper

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Title: Dan Hooper


1
Hot on the Trail of Particle Dark Matter
  • Dan Hooper
  • Particle Astrophysics Center
  • Fermi National Laboratory
  • dhooper_at_fnal.gov

University of Kansas April 17, 2006
2
What do we know about dark matter?
3
What do we know about dark matter?
Ask An Astrophysicist
? A Great Deal!
4
The Existence of Dark Matter
Vera Rubin Fritz Zwicky
  • Galaxy and cluster rotation curves have pointed
    to the presence of large quantities of
    non-luminous matter for many decades (conclusive
    evidence since the 1970s)

5
The Existence of Dark Matter
Vera Rubin Fritz Zwicky
  • Galaxy and cluster rotation curves have pointed
    to the presence of large quantities of
    non-luminous matter for many decades (conclusive
    evidence since the 1970s)

In the new age of precision cosmology, we now
know much more!
6
The Density of our Universe
The anisotropies in the cosmic microwave
background (CMB) have been studied to reveal the
curvature and density of our Universe
?tot ? 1
(about 10-29
grams/cm3)
7
The Composition of Our Universe
  • In addition to matter, general relativity allows
    for a cosmological term, L?(vacuum energy/dark
    energy)
  • Quantum field theory would suggest that WL?
    1060, 10120, or 0
  • So, we had expected to measure WL? 0

8
The Composition of Our Universe
  • In addition to matter, general relativity allows
    for a cosmological term, L?(vacuum energy/dark
    energy)
  • Quantum field theory would suggest that WL?
    1060, 10120, or 0
  • So, we had expected to measure WL? 0
  • Our expectations turned out to be wrong!

9
The Composition of Our
Universe
  • Compare expansion history of our Universe to the
    CMB anisotropies and cluster masses

Best fit to data
Flat, all matter Universe
10
The Composition of Our
Universe
  • Compare expansion history of our Universe to the
    CMB anisotropies and cluster masses
  • In addition to matter, our Universe contains a
    great deal of dark energy (WL? 0.72)

Best fit to data
Flat, all matter Universe
11
Whats The Matter?
  • So 30 of our Universes density is in the form
    of matter (mostly dark matter, as seen from
    galaxy rotation curves, clusters, etc.)
  • So what kind of matter is it?
  • First guess Baryons (white dwarfs, brown dwarfs,
    neutron stars, jupiter-like planets, black holes,
    etc.)

12

Baryon Abundance
  • Big Bang nucleosynthesis combined with cosmic
    microwave background determine WBh2 ? 0.024
  • ???WB 0.05
  • But, we also know WM 0.3, so most of the matter
    in the Universe is non-baryonic!

Fields and Sarkar, 2004
13

Cold Dark Matter and Structure Formation
  • Observations of the large scale structure of our
    Universe can be compared to computer simulations
  • Simulation results depend primarily on whether
    the dark matter is hot (relativistic) or cold
    (non-relativistic) when structures were formed
  • Most of the Universes matter must be Cold Dark
    Matter

14
The world is full of obvious thing which nobody
by any chance ever observes. -Sherlock Holmes

15
What do we know about dark matter?
Ask An Astrophysicist
? A Great Deal!
16
What do we know about dark matter?
Ask An Astrophysicist
? A Great Deal!
Ask A Particle Physicist
?Next to Nothing (but we have some good guesses)
17
The Particle Nature of Dark Matter
Axions, Neutralinos, Gravitinos, Axinos,
Kaluza-Klein States, Heavy Fourth Generation
Neutrinos, Mirror Particles, Stable States in
Little Higgs Theories, WIMPzillas, Cryptons,
Sterile Neutrinos, Sneutrinos, Light Scalars,
Q-Balls, D-Matter, SuperWIMPS, Brane World Dark
Matter,
  • A virtual zoo of dark matter candidates have been
    proposed over the years. 100s of viable
    candidates.
  • Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (WIMPs) are
    a particularly attractive class of dark matter
    candidates.

18
The Thermal Abundance of a WIMP
  • Stable particle, X, in thermal equilibrium in
    early Universe (freely created and annihilated,
    roughly as plentiful as ordinary types of matter)
  • As Universe cools, number density of X becomes
    Boltzman suppressed
  • But expansion of the Universe makes finding Xs
    to annihilate with difficult, suppressing the
    annihilation rate

19
The Thermal Abundance of a WIMP
  • Expansion leads to a thermal freeze-out of X
    particles
  • For a particle with weak scale interactions,
    freeze-out occurs at a temperature, TMX/20
  • With weak scale interactions, freeze out leads to
    a density of X particles of ?1

20
The Thermal Abundance of a WIMP
  • Expansion leads to a thermal freeze-out of X
    particles
  • For a particle with weak scale interactions,
    freeze-out occurs at a temperature, TMX/20
  • With weak scale interactions, freeze out leads to
    a density of X particles of ?1

Automatically generates observed relic density!!!
21
Supersymmetry
  • Elegant extension of the Standard Model
  • For each fermion in nature, a corresponding boson
    must also exist (and vice versa)
  • New spectrum of superpartner particles yet to
    be discovered

22
Why Supersymmetry?
  • Not introduced for dark matter

23
Why Supersymmetry?
  • Not introduced for dark matter
  • Higgs mass stability

24
Supersymmetry and the Mass of the Higgs Boson
  • Electroweak precision observables indicate the
    presence of a light Higgs boson (around 100 GeV)
  • Large contributions to the Higgs mass come from
    particle loops



  • Without SUSY, ? MGUT or MPlanck? ultra-heavy
    Higgs
  • With TeV scale SUSY, boson and fermion loops
    nearly cancel
  • ? light Higgs

25
Why Supersymmetry?
  • Not introduced for dark matter
  • Higgs mass stability
  • Grand Unification

26
Supersymmetry and Grand Unification
  • If there is a Grand Unified Theory (GUT) in
    nature, then we expect the SM forces to become of
    equal strength at some high energy scale
  • In the Standard Model, couplings become
    similar, but not equal

27
Supersymmetry and Grand Unification
  • With Supersymmetry, the three forces can unify at
    a single scale

28
Supersymmetry and Dark Matter
  • For the proton to be sufficiently stable,
    R-parity must be conserved
  • Evenness or oddness of superpartners is conserved
  • Consequence the Lightest Supersymmetric Particle
    (LSP) is stable, and a potentially viable dark
    matter candidate
  • The identity of the LSP depends on the mechanism
    of supersymmetry breaking

29
The Lightest Supersymmetric Particle
  • Dark matter candidates must be electrically
    neutral, not colored
  • Possibilities
  • photino
  • Zino
  • (neutral) higgsinos
  • sneutrinos
  • gravitino
  • axino

30
The Lightest Supersymmetric Particle
  • Dark matter candidates must be electrically
    neutral, not colored
  • Possibilities
  • photino
  • Zino
  • (neutral) higgsinos
  • sneutrinos
  • gravitino
  • axino

Do not naturally generate the observed dark
matter density
31
The Lightest Supersymmetric Particle
  • Dark matter candidates must be electrically
    neutral, not colored
  • Possibilities
  • photino
  • Zino
  • (neutral) higgsinos
  • sneutrinos
  • gravitino
  • axino

Ruled out by direct detection
Do not naturally generate the observed dark
matter density
32
The Lightest Supersymmetric Particle
  • Dark matter candidates must be electrically
    neutral, not colored
  • Possibilities
  • photino
  • Zino
  • (neutral) higgsinos
  • sneutrinos
  • gravitino
  • axino

Mix to form 4 neutralinos
Ruled out by direct detection
Do not naturally generate the observed dark
matter density
33
How To Search For A WIMP
  • Direct Detection
  • Indirect Detection
  • Colliders

34
Direct Detection
  • Underground experiments hope to detect recoils of
    dark matter particles elastically scattering off
    of their detectors
  • Prospects depend on the WIMPs elastic scattering
    cross section with nuclei
  • Leading experiments include CDMS (Minnesota),
    Edelweiss (France), and Zeplin (UK)

35
Direct Detection
  • Elastic scattering can occur through Higgs and
    squark exchange diagrams

?
?
?
?

q
h,H
q
q
q
q
SUSY Models
  • Cross section depends on numerous SUSY
    parameters neutralino mass and composition,
    tan?, squark masses and mixings, Higgs masses and
    mixings

36
Direct Detection
  • Current Status

Zeplin, Edelweiss
DAMA
CDMS
Supersymmetric Models

37
Direct Detection
  • Near-Future Prospects

Zeplin, Edelweiss
DAMA
CDMS
Supersymmetric Models
CDMS, Edelweiss Projections

38
Direct Detection
  • Long-Term Prospects

Zeplin, Edelweiss
DAMA
CDMS
Supersymmetric Models
Super-CDMS, Zeplin-Max

39
Indirect Detection
  • Attempt to observe annihilation products of dark
    matter annihilating in halo, or elsewhere
  • Prospects depend on both the characteristics of
    the dark matter particle and its distribution in
    the halo
  • Gamma-rays, neutrinos, positrons, anti-protons
    and anti-deuterons each provide a potentially
    viable channel for the detection of dark matter

40
Indirect Detection Anti-Matter
  • Matter and anti-matter generated equally in dark
    matter annihilations (unlike other processes)
  • Cosmic positron, anti-proton and anti-deuteron
    spectrum may contain signatures of particle dark
    matter
  • Upcoming experiments (PAMELA, AMS-02) will
    measure the cosmic anti-matter spectrum with much
    greater precision, and at much higher energies

41
Indirect Detection Positrons
  • Positrons produced through a range of dark matter
    annihilation channels
  • (decays of heavy quarks, heavy leptons, gauge
    bosons, etc.)
  • Positrons move under influence of galactic
    magnetic fields
  • Energy losses through inverse compton and
    synchotron scattering with starlight, CMB

42
Indirect Detection Positrons
  • Determine positron spectrum at Earth by solving
    diffusion equation

Energy Loss Rate
Diffusion Constant
Source Term
  • Inputs
  • Diffusion constant
  • Energy loss rate
  • Annihilation cross section/modes
  • Halo profile (inhomogeneities?)
  • Boundary conditions
  • Dark matter mass

43
Indirect Detection Positrons
  • Reduce systematics by studying the positron
    fraction
  • When plotted this way, HEAT experiment observes a
    significant excess

44
Indirect Detection Positrons
Supersymmetric (neutralino) origin of positron
excess? -Spectrum generated by annihilating
neutralinos can fit the HEAT data

45
Indirect Detection Positrons
Supersymmetric (neutralino) origin of positron
excess? -Spectrum generated by annihilating
neutralinos can fit the HEAT data -Normalization
is another issue

46
Indirect Detection Positrons
  • The Annihilation Rate (Normalization)
  • -If a thermal relic is considered, a large degree
    of local
  • inhomogeneity (boost factor) is
    required in dark matter halo
  • -Might local clumps of dark matter accommodate
    this?
  • Two mass scales
  • -Sum of small mass (10-1 - 10-6 M?) clumps
  • ? Small boost (2-10, whereas 50 or
    more is required)
  • -A single large mass clump (104 - 108 M?)
  • ? Unlikely at 10-4 level

Hooper, J. Taylor and J. Silk, PRD
(hep-ph/0312076) H. Zhao, J. Taylor, J. Silk and
Hooper (hep-ph/0508215)
47
Indirect Detection Positrons
Where does this leave us?
  • Future cosmic positron experiments hold great
    promise
  • PAMELA satellite, planned to be launched in 2006
  • AMS-02, planned for deployment
  • onboard the ISS (???)

48
Indirect Detection Positrons
With a HEAT sized signal
  • Dramatic signal for either PAMELA or AMS-02
  • Clear, easily identifiable signature of dark
    matter

Hooper and J. Silk, PRD (hep-ph/0409104)
49
Indirect Detection Positrons
With a smaller signal
  • More difficult for PAMELA or AMS-02
  • Still one of the most promising dark matter
    search techniques

Hooper and J. Silk, PRD (hep-ph/0409104)
50
Indirect Detection Positrons
Prospects for Neutralino Dark Matter
  • AMS-02 can detect a thermal (s-wave) relic up
    to 200 GeV, for any boost factor, and all likely
    annihilation modes
  • For modest boost factor of 5, AMS-02 can detect
    dark matter as heavy as 1 TeV
  • PAMELA, with modest boost factors, can reach
    masses of 250 GeV
  • Non-thermal scenarios (AMSB, etc), can be easily
    tested


Value for thermal abundance
Hooper and J. Silk, PRD (hep-ph/0409104)
51
Indirect Detection Neutrinos
  • WIMPs elastically scatter with massive bodies
    (Sun)
  • Captured at a rate 1018 s-1 (??p/10-8 pb) (100
    GeV/m?)2
  • Over billions of years, annihilation/capture
    rates equilibrate
  • Annihilation products are absorbed, except for
    neutrinos

52
Indirect Detection Neutrinos
  • The IceCube Neutrino Telescope
  • Full cubic kilometer instrumented volume
  • Technology proven with predecessor, AMANDA
  • First string of detectors deployed in 2004/2005,
  • 8 more strings deployed in 2005/2006 (80 in
    total)
  • Sensitive to muon neutrinos above 100 GeV
  • Similar physics reach to KM3 in
  • Mediterranean Sea

53
Indirect Detection Neutrinos
  • Neutrino flux depends on the capture rate, which
    is in turn tied to the elastic scattering cross
    section
  • Direct detection limits impact rates anticipated
    in neutrino telescopes

54
Indirect Detection Neutrinos
  • WIMPs become captured in the Sun through
    spin-independent and spin-dependent scattering
  • Direct detection constraints on spin-dependent
    scattering are still very weak

Spin-Dependent
Spin-Independent
55
Indirect Detection Neutrinos
What Kind of Neutralino Has a Large
Spin-Dependent Coupling?
?
Z
q
q
q
q
q
q
Always Small
? fH12 - fH22
Substantial Higgsino Component Needed
56
Indirect Detection Neutrinos
What Kind of Neutralino Has a Large
Spin-Dependent Couplings?
Large Rate At IceCube/KM3
Large Rate in IceCube/KM3


F. Halzen and Hooper (hep-ph/0510048)
57
Indirect Detection Gamma-Rays

Advantages of Gamma-Rays
  • Propagate undeflected (point sources possible)
  • Propagate without energy loss (spectral
    information)
  • Distinctive spectral features (lines), provide
    potential smoking gun
  • Wide range of experimental technology (ACTs,
    satellite-based)



Disadvantages of Gamma-Rays
  • Flux depends critically on poorly known inner
    halo profiles
  • ? predictions dramatically vary from model
    to model
  • Astrophysical backgrounds

58
Indirect Detection Gamma-Rays
The Galactic Center Region
  • Likely to be the brightest source of dark matter
    annihilation radiation
  • Detected in TeV gamma-rays by three
  • ACTs Cangaroo-II, Whipple and HESS
  • Possible evidence for dark matter?



59
Indirect Detection Gamma-Rays

The Cangaroo-II Observation
  • Consistent with WIMP in 1-4 TeV mass range
  • Roughly consistent with Whipple/Veritas



Hooper, Perez, Silk, Ferrer and Sarkar, JCAP,
astro-ph/0404205
60
Indirect Detection Gamma-Rays

The Cangaroo-II Observation
  • Consistent with WIMP in 1-4 TeV mass range
  • Roughly consistent with Whipple/Veritas

The HESS Obsevation
  • Superior telescope
  • Inconsistent with Cangaroo-II
  • Extends at least to 10 TeV
  • WIMP of 10-40 TeV mass needed



D. Horns, PLB, astro-ph/0408192
61
Indirect Detection Gamma-Rays

Can A Neutralino Be As Heavy As 10-40 TeV?
  • Very heavy neutralinos tend to overclose the
    Universe
  • Neutralinos heavier than a few TeV require fine
    tuning (through coannihilations) to evade too
    much relic density (S. Profumo, hep-ph/0508628)
  • If superpartners are heavier than a few TeV, then
    the Higgs mass is no longer naturally light (one
    of the primary motivations for supersymmetry in
    the first place)



62
Indirect Detection Gamma-Rays

Can A Neutralino Be As Heavy As 10-40 TeV?
  • Very heavy neutralinos tend to overclose the
    Universe
  • Neutralinos heavier than a few TeV require fine
    tuning (through coannihilations) to evade too
    much relic density (S. Profumo, hep-ph/0508628)
  • If superpartners are heavier than a few TeV, then
    the Higgs mass is no longer naturally light (one
    of the primary motivations for supersymmetry in
    the first place)



?10-40 TeV Supersymmetry is extremely unattractive
63
Indirect Detection Gamma-Rays
Messenger Sector Dark Matter
  • In Gauge Mediated SUSY Breaking (GMSB) models,
    SUSY is broken in 100 TeV sector
  • LSP is a light gravitino (1-10 eV), poor DM
    candidate
  • Lightest messenger particle is naturally stable,
    multi-TeV scalar neutrino is a viable dark matter
    candidate



Dimopolous, Giudice and Pomarol, PLB
(hep-ph/9607225) Han and Hemfling, PLB
(hep-ph/9708264) Han, Marfatia, Zhang, PRD
(hep-ph/9906508) Hooper and J. March-Russell,
PLB (hep-ph/0412048)
64
Indirect Detection Gamma-Rays
Messenger Sector Dark Matter
  • Gamma-ray spectrum (marginally) consistent with
    HESS data
  • Normalization requires highly cuspy,
  • compressed, or spiked halo profile
  • With further HESS observation of
  • region, dark matter hypothesis should
  • be conclusively tested
  • Source appears increasingly likely to
  • be of an astrophysical origin



Hooper and J. March-Russell, PLB (hep-ph/0412048)
65
Astrophysical Origin of Galactic Center Source?
  • A region rich in extreme astrophysical objects
  • Particle acceleration associated with
    supermassive black hole?
  • Aharonian and Neronov (astro-ph/0408303),
  • Atoyan and Dermer (astro-ph/0410243)
  • Nearby Supernova Remnant to close
  • to rule out
  • If this source is of an astrophysical
  • nature, it would represent a extremely
  • challenging background for future
  • dark matter searches to overcome
  • (GLAST, AMS, etc.)
  • (Zaharijas and Hooper, astro-ph/0603540)



Hooper, Perez, Silk, Ferrer and Sarkar, JCAP,
astro-ph/0404205
66
Indirect Detection Gamma-Rays
Dwarf Spheriodal Galaxies
  • Several very high mass-to-light dwarf galaxies in
    Milky Way
  • (Draco, Sagittarius, etc.)
  • Little is known for certain about the halo
    profiles of such objects
  • For example, draco mass estimates range from 107
    to 1010 solar masses
  • ? broad range of predictions for
    annihilation rate/gamma-ray flux
  • May provide several very bright sources of dark
    matter annihilation radiation or very, very
    little
  • Detection of Draco by CACTUS experiment???
  • (Bergstrom Hooper, hep-ph/0512317 Profumo
    Kamionkowski, astro-ph/0601249)



67
How To Search For A WIMP Colliders
  • If mDM mEW (along with associated particles),
  • discovery likely at LHC
    and/or Tevatron
  • Strong constraints from LEP data

68
Supersymmetry At The Tevatron
  • Most promising channel is through
    neutralino-chargino production
  • For example,
  • Tevatron searches for light squarks and gluinos
    are also interesting
  • Tevatron SUSY searches only possible if
  • superpartners are rather light

69
Supersymmetry At The LHC
  • Squarks and gluinos will be produced prolificly
    at the LHC (probably discovered within first
    month of running)
  • Squarks/gluinos decay to leptonsjetsmissing
    energy (LSPs)
  • Lightest neutralino mass to be measured to 10
    precision
  • But is it dark matter?
  • Calculated relic density should be
  • compared to CDM density

70
Putting It All Together

71
Summary
  • Very exciting prospects exist for direct,
    indirect and collider searches for dark matter
  • Cosmic anti-matter searches will be sensitive to
    thermally produced (s-wave) WIMPs up to
    hundreds of GeV (PAMELA) or 1 TeV (AMS-02)
  • Kilometer scale neutrino telescopes (IceCube,
    KM3) will be capable of detecting mixed
    gaugino-higgsino neutralinos
  • Gamma-ray astronomy is improving rapidly, but it
    is difficult to predict the prospects for dark
    matter detection given the astrophysical
    uncertainties Dwarf spheriodals are among the
    most promising sources




72
The Cork Is Still In the Champagne Bottle
  • Furthermore
  • Direct detection experiments (CDMS) have
  • reached 10-7 pb level, with 1-2 orders of
  • magnitude expected in near future (many
  • of the most attractive SUSY models)
  • Collider searches (LHC, Tevatron) are
  • exceedingly likely to discover Supersymmetry
  • or whatever other new physics is associated
  • with the electroweak scale




73
But Maybe Not For Long



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