14–24 Jul 2025
CICG - International Conference Centre - Geneva, Switzerland
Europe/Zurich timezone

Cosmic ray antihelium in the Galaxy

21 Jul 2025, 15:50
15m
Room C

Room C

Talk Cosmic-Ray Indirect CRI

Speaker

Pedro De la Torre Luque (Institute of theoretical physics (IFT-UAM))

Description

The creation of anti-nuclei in the Galaxy has been discussed as a possible signal of exotic production mechanisms such as primordial black hole evaporation or dark matter decay/annihilation in addition to the more conventional production from cosmic-ray interactions. Tentative observations of cosmic-ray andideuteron and antihelium by the AMS-02 collaboration have re-energized the quest to use antinuclei to search for physics beyond the standard model.

In this talk, we show state-of-art predictions of the antinuclei flux from both cosmic-ray interactions with the interstellar medium and standard dark matter annihilation models from combined fits to high-precision antiproton data as well as cosmic-ray nuclei measurements. Astrophysical mechanisms can explain the amount of antideuteron events detected by AMS-02, while their antihelium production lies far below the sensitivity of this experiment. In turn, standard dark matter models could potentially produce the detected antideuteron and antihelium-3 events, but the production of any detectable antihelium-4 flux would require exotic physics. We also present prospects for detection of these antinuclei by future detectors, such as GAPs and ALADInO.

Authors

Pedro De la Torre Luque (Institute of theoretical physics (IFT-UAM)) Tim Linden

Presentation materials