Title: WIN05 Astroparticle Physics (WG4) Summary
1WIN05 Astroparticle Physics (WG4) Summary
- Mark Vagins
- University of California, Irvine
Delphi, Greece June 6 - 11, 2005
2Thanks to Rachel Bean, my missing co-convener
(theory).
Any omissions/errors are my responsibility!
3Auger Observatory
Stephane Coutu
- 10 years 3000 km2 yields 300 -500 events gt1020
eV - SOURCES? Two Observatories Necessary
4The Cosmic Ray Spectrum
Fluxes rescaled by E2
gt1019 eV 1 per (km2 year sr)
gt1020 eV 1 per (km2 century sr)
5Techniques for UHECR Detection
- UHECR generate cascades (showers) in the
atmosphere - 1020 eV yields 1011 particles at maximum
- Shower front particles can be
- directly detected on the ground
- Showers excite nitrogen
- fluorescence, detectable on dark
- nights
6Auger Hybrid Detector
7Auger Surface Detectors
8Auger Status June 05
- 793 surface detectors deployed (755 fully
functional) - 3 fluorescence detector buildings completed, 1
under construction (15 telescopes fully
instrumented)
Completion date July 2006
9First Auger Spectrum
Total acceptance is ?? ? 1015 m2 sr s
10 Astrophysical Sources
of TeV to GZK neutrinos
- Peter Mészáros
- Pennsylvania State University
11 Acceleration to 1021eV? 102
Joules 0.01 MGUT
- dense regions with exceptional
- gravitational force creating relativistic
- flows of charged particles, e.g.
- coalescing black holes/neutron stars
- dense cores of exploding stars
- supermassive black holes
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13GZK neutrinos
they are a guaranteed source!!
- Ultra-high energy cosmic rays
- Origin unknown, but
- Standard Model
- Ordinary charged particles accelerated by distant
sources AGN, GRBs - If so GZK neutrinos are the signature
- Probably necessary and sufficient to confirm
standard GZK model
n
GZKbrick wall
- Two predictions
- 1. There is a brick wall for the highest energy
cosmic rays. We should observe energies below
about 1020 eV. - 2. Reactions that limit the cosmic ray energies
produce neutrinos as a by-product
GZK neutrinos ? probably 2nd most likely source
of UHE neutrinos!
(Courtesy A. Silvestri via D. Saltzberg)
14What do we need for a GZK n detector?
Standard model GZK Fn lt1 per km2 per day
Only 1 in 500 interact in ice
Both AMANDA-II or IceCube may expect to see 1
event every 2 years in its fiducial
volume requires astronomical level of patience!
How can we get the 100-1000 km3 sr yr exposures
needed to detect GZK neutrinos at an acceptable
rate?
QUESTION
- Askaryan process coherent radio Cherenkov
emission - EM cascades produce a charge asymmetry ? radio
pulse - Process is coherent ? Quadratic rise of power
with cascade energy - Neutrinos can shower in radio-transparent media
- air, ice, rock salt, etc.
- ?RF economy of scale very competitive for giant
detectors
ANSWER
15Summary UHE ?
- GRBs ? 1020 eV protons
- - Predictions ?103 km2 area detectors
- - Experiments HiRes, Auger, EUSO/OWL
- GRBs ? 10 GeV, 1 Tev, 100 TeV, 1018 eV ?s
- - Flux ? 1 Gton detectors
- - Exps AMANDA, IceCube, Antares,
Nestor, Nemo - ? detection
- - GRBs CR puzzle, GRB progenitors
physics - - ? physics ?? ??? ? ? appearance
- - Cross sections at E gt LHC
-
16The Diffuse Supernova Neutrino Background
Louie Strigari The Ohio State
University
Collaborators John Beacom, Manoj Kaplinghat,
Gary Steigman, Terry Walker, Pengjie Zhang
17DSNB The Big Picture
Core Collapse of Massive Star
Gives Burst of 1058 Neutrinos
Massive Star Formation Since z 6
The Diffuse Supernova Neutrino Background (DSNB)
Cosmological background of neutrinos from all
supernovae that have occurred
18 DSNB Detection
Event Rate of targets x cross section
x flux
Largest Yield from Inverse Beta
Super-Kamiokande (22.5 kton)
1.5 x 1033
Invisible
Visible
19Backgrounds to Detection
Atmosphere
Below 50 MeV, Muon is Invisible
20Super-K Upper Limit
- 4 years of data gives flux limit 1.2 cm-2
s-1 - Detection signature is an excess of events
- Detection timescale with fiducial model is 9
years - Strigari, Kaplinghat, Steigman, Walker 2004
Super-Kamiokande Collaboration, PRL 90, 061101
(2003)
21DSNB Event Rate Predictions
- Modern predictions for Super-K
3 events/yr above 18 MeV
6 events/yr above 10 MeV - Ando, Sato Totani 2003
- Fukugita Kawasaki 2003
- Strigari, Kaplinghat, Steigman Walker 2004
- Atmospheric Background Reduction
- Beacom Vagins 2004
22 DARK ENERGY
PHENOMENOLOGY PRESENT/FUTURE OBSERVATIONS
RICHARD BATTYE
JODRELL BANK OBSERVATORY SCHOOL OF PHYSICS AND
ASTRONOMY UNIVERSITY OF MANCHESTER
23BASIC OBSERVATIONAL SITUATION
SNe Ia
2dF/SDSS
CMB
24DARK ENERGY
- PRESSURE TO DENSITY RATIO
- w-1 COSMOLOGICAL CONSTANT
- SCALAR FIELDS QUINTESSENCE
- TOPOLOGICAL DEFECT LATTICES
- MODIFICATIONS TO GRAVITY ?
- SUPER-HORIZON PERTURBATIONS !
ASSUME FLAT UNIVERSE
NB POSSIBLE NON-MINIMAL COUPLING TO GRAVITY
EASY TO MODEL GIVEN A LAGRANGIAN
MODELLED AS A RELATIVISTIC SOLID ie A FLUID WITH
RIGIDITY
COSMIC STRINGS w-1/3DOMAIN WALLS
w-2/3
25TWO CLASSES OF TESTS
GEOMETRICAL
GROWTH OF STRUCTURE
ONLY DEPENDS ON w !
GROWTH DEPENDS ON w AND ALSO ON THE PROPERTIES
OF THE DARK ENERGY
ANGULAR DIAMETER DISTANCE
LINEAR REGIME
LUMINOSITYDISTANCE
NON-LINEAR REGIME
(i) MASS FUNCTION (ii) SPHERICAL COLLAPSE
() OFTEN GEOMETRIC DEPENDENCE AS WELL
26CONCLUSIONS
- DARK ENERGY APPEARS TO EXIST
- GOOD MICROSCOPIC MODELS SCARCE
- PHENOMOLOGICAL DESCRIPTION REQUIRED
- IN PRINCIPLE MANY WAYS TO TEST IT
- MANY SYSTEMATIC ISSUES TO BE ADDRESSED
- VARIATION IN w DIFFICULT
- DARK ENERGY EXPERIMENTS COST 10 MILLION
//EUROS
27And then
Genevieve Belanger SSM Dark Matter (WG1)
Andrew Taylor Weak Lensing
Gravity from diffuse sources distorts background
galaxy shapes into ellipses ? Powerful technique
for probing (dark) matter distributions Now using
redshift data for 3D modeling of dark matter
28Ground-based and Future Observations of the
Cosmic Microwave Background
Anthony Lasenby Astrophysics Group, Cavendish
Laboratory, Cambridge University
DelphiApril 7th 2005
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30Latest CMB results - CAPMAP
- CAPMAP Cosmic Anisotropy Polarization Mapper
- Chicago, Princeton, JPL, Caltech and others
collaboration - Four 84 100 GHz polarization receivers mounted
in focal plane of a Lucent 7m telescope in New
Jersey (Crawford Hill) - Going after E-mode anisotropy at 4 scale, in two
wide bins - First results reported February 2005 (Barkats et
al, astro-ph/0409380) - Heterodyne technology and collaboration prototype
for QUIET (see later)
31Current Experiments - QUAD
- QUAD Quest at DASI
- Cardiff, Stanford, Chicago, Edinburgh and others
collaboration - 100 and 150 GHz polarization sensitive
bolometers, feeding 2.6 m primary - On DASI mount at South Pole
- Also going after E-mode anisotropy at 4 scale
- Data-taking now underway over-winter at South
Pole (currently -75 degrees C!)
32New CMB projects - CLOVER
- CLOVER
- Joint project between Cambridge, Cardiff and
Oxford - Aim is to image B-mode polarization of the CMB
- Smoking gun tensor mode perturbations (gravity
waves) in early universe - Funded by PPARC construction beginning
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34The NESTOR Neutrino Telescope Site
3532 m diameter 30 m between floors
20 000 m2 Effective Area for Egt10TeV
Energy threshold as low as 4 GeV
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37 March 2003
Successful deployment of one NESTOR star with 12
Optical Modules to 4000m using the cableship
RAYMOND CROZE (FranceTelecom) 30th of March
The first deep sea muon data transmitted to
shore through a 30km long electro-optical cable
to the Methoni counting room
38The ANTARES Collaboration
Alexander Kappes
20 institutions from 6 European countries
39The ANTARES Detector
- Hostile environment
- pressure up to 240 bar
- sea water (corrosion)
artists view (not to scale)
40Detector Infrastructure and Prototype Lines
- Deep-sea cable to shore station deployed
- Junction box deployed and connected to deep-sea
cable - Prototype lines deployed, connected to junction
box and successfully recovered after 5 months
(2003)
41New Test-Lines MILOM and Line0
- Deployed March 2005, connected April 2005
Line0 full line without electronics (test of
mechanical structure)
MILOM Mini Instrumentation Line with Optical
Modules
42ANTARES further schedule
- First full string (Line1) to be deployed and
connected end of 2005 - Full detector installed in 2007
- From 2006 on physics analysis !
43Paolo Desiati
44First year deployment (Jan 2005) 1 IceCube
string (60 OMs) 8 IceTop Tanks (16 OMs)
IceTop 160 tanks frozen-water tanks 2 OMs / tank
1200 m
IceTop
IceCube
AMANDA
IceCube 80 strings 60 OMs/string 17 m vertical
spacing 125 m between strings
10 Hamamatsu R-7081
45n telescope AMANDA event
energy deposited in OM
time recorded on OM
46n telescope point source search
Detection of nm with time rolling search
- time window 40 / 20 days for Extragalactic /
Galactic Objects - angular bin 2.25-3.75
Source Nr. of n events (4 years) Expected backgr. (4 years) Period duration Nr. of doublets Chance probability
Markarian 421 6 5.58 40 days 0 1
1ES1959650 5 3.71 40 days 1 0.34
3EG J12274302 6 4.37 40 days 1 0.43
QSO 0235164 6 5.04 40 days 1 0.52
Cygnus X-3 6 5.04 20 days 0 1
GRS 1915105 6 4.76 20 days 1 0.32
GRO J042232 5 5.12 20 days 0 1
47IceCube deployment plan
- January 05
- Strings 1
- Tanks/stations 8/4
- 05/06 Plan
- Strings 10 - 12
- Tanks/stations 24/12
runway
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541st Launch in 2006!
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56Super-Kamiokande
Yasuo Takeuchi
- SK-I (19962001)
- 50000ton water
- 11200 of 20inch PMTs
- Fid. vol. 22.5kt
- Photo coverage 40
- Stopped by the accident in Nov. 2001
- SK-II (Dec. 2002)
- 5200 of 20inch PMTs
- Photo coverage 19
Electronics hut
LINAC
Water and air purification system
Control room
Atotsu entrance
41.4m
Ikeno-yama Kamioka-cho, Gifu
1km (2700mwe)
2km
3km
SK
Mozumi
Atotsu
39.3m
Inner Detector (ID) 11146 of 20 inch PMTs (SK-I)
Outer Detector (OD) 1885 of 8 inch PMTs (SK-I
SK-II)
50000 ton stainless steel tank
578B Flux
Consistent with SK-I
SK-I result 2.35 /-0.02(stat.) /-0.08(syst.)
58Energy spectrum
Consistent with SK-I
59Day / Night asymmetry
(Day-Night)
0.024 - 0.025
ADN
0.014/-0.049(stat.) (sys.)
(DayNight)/2
Preliminary
0.013
SK-I D/N Asymmetry -0.021/-0.020
- 0.012
60Future plan
NOW
1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
SK-I
SK-II
SK-III
Accident
SK full reconstruction (plan)
DAQ stop November 2005 March 2006
ID PMT SK-II 5200 SK-III 11146
(same as SK-I) Original energy vertex
resolutions for low-energy events
Solar neutrinos below 5.0MeV with improved
analysis tools and lower Rn backgrounds
Precise study on spectrum distortion in SK-III
61Possibility of detecting spectrum distortion
ne survival probability
Recoil electron spectrum
10 upturn should be seen
P(ne ? ne)
syst. error
Dm2 (eV2) 6.3 x 10-5 4.8 x 10-5 7.2 x 10-5 10.0
x 10-5 7.2 x 10-5
tan2(q) 0.55 0.38 0.38 0.38 0.28
En (MeV)
62A future option - Gd doped SK (GADZOOKS!)
Beacom Vagins, PRL93 (2004)171101
- Gd doped SK is seriously studied as a future
option of SK, lead by UCI group. - Physics targets SN relic neutrinos, reactor
anti-neutrinos, galactic SN neutrinos,
long-baseline neutrinos, proton decay BG
reduction,
ne p ? e n
(tag this neutron)
90 captured on Gd, gs, total Eg 8MeV 0.2 on
Cl, gs, total Eg 8.6MeV Others on p, 2.2MeV g
0.2 GdCl3
63Atsushi Takeda
Multi purpose low-background experiment with liq.
Xe
- Xenon MASSive detector for solar neutrino
(pp/7Be) - Xenon neutrino MASS detector (bb decay)
- Xenon detector for Weakly Interacting MASSive
Particles (DM search)
Dark matter
Double beta
64- Large Z (54)
- Self-shielding effect
- Large photon yield (42 photons/keV NaI(Tl))
- Low threshold
- High density (3 g/cm3)
- Compact detector (10 ton sphere with
diameter of 2m) - Purification (distillation)
- No long life radioactive isotope
- Scintillation wavelength (175 nm, detected
directly by PMT) - Relative high temperature (165 K)
6510 ton detector
800kg detector
100kg Prototype
With light guide
30cm
80cm
2.5m
RD
Dark matter search
We are now here
Multipurpose detector (solar neutrino, bb )
66- 100 kg prototype detector
In the Kamioka Mine (near Super-K)
2,700 m.w.e.
OFHC cubic chamber
Gamma ray shield
67Geometry design (800 kg)
- A tentative design
- (not final one)
12 pentagons / pentakisdodecahedron
This geometry has been coded in a Geant 4 based
simulator
68Dark Matter Searches - Scientific Motivation
Tim Sumner
- Cosmology is the dark matter that makes up
22 of the Universe in the form of massive
particles?
- Supersymmetry are these the particles
predicted by supersymmetry?
- Galaxy formation and dynamics how do these
particles behave within galaxes?
69Direct DM Search World Status
- Comparison between experiments made using a
standard Galaxy model - Separated into spin-independent (scalar)
cross-sections and spin-dependent (axial)
cross-sections and normalised to one nucleon
- Spin independent
- DAMA
- IGEX
- CRESST II
- CDMS I
- EDELWEISS
- ZEPLIN I
- CDMS II
N.B. Predictions extend down to 10-47 cm2!
70IGEX, DRIFTI, II
WIMP elastic nuclear recoils deposit lt 100keV of
energy at a rate 10-5 to 1 event/day/kg
? phonons, photons and charge whose relative
proportions and /or characteristics depend on
dE/dx ? particle type
CDMS, EDELWEISS
ZEPLIN II, III, MAX, XENON
NAIAD, ZEPLIN I, DAMA
CRESST I
CRESST II, ROSEBUD
World competition is intense and uses a wide
range of complementary techniques
Event-by-event particle identification requires
compound information
71ZEPLIN II data in four months
ZEPLIN III underground in 6 mon.
72- UKDMC has a unique and very strong world
position, and is poised for rapid advances. - Dedicated world-class well-equipped
low-background underground laboratory. - Competitive world limits already demonstrated.
- A new generation of competitive and scalable
high-sensitivity instruments (ZII and ZIII) about
to be deployed with limiting sensitivities 10-7
to 10-8 pb. - Upgrade paths for these instruments to extend the
sensitivity to 10-9 pb. - A unique and scalable directional technology
leading to significant galactic astrophysics
return. - Multiple target options for confirmation and
constraining SUSY parameter space. - Mature plans for achieving tonne-scale targets.
73Daniel McKinsey
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79CLEAN - 10 tons fiducial LNe needed for pp solar
neutrinos
Mini-CLEAN (600 kg LNe) in SNOLAB in 2007? RD
plus WIMP search
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87And thats the way it was in WG4.