12–16 Sept 2016
CERN
Europe/Zurich timezone
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Dark matter velocity spectrocopy

16 Sept 2016, 15:20
20m
6/2-024 - BE Auditorium Meyrin (CERN)

6/2-024 - BE Auditorium Meyrin

CERN

120
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Oral Contributions Dark matter (indirect detection) Dark matter (indirect detection)

Speaker

Ranjan Laha (Stanford University)

Description

Dark matter decays or annihilations that produce line-like spectra may be smoking-gun signals. However, even such distinctive signatures can be mimicked by astrophysical or instrumental causes. We show that velocity spectroscopy-the measurement of energy shifts induced by relative motion of source and observer-can separate these three causes with minimal theoretical uncertainties. The principal obstacle has been energy resolution, but upcoming experiments will reach the required 0.1% level. We show some examples of this application.

Summary

Dark matter decays or annihilations that produce line-like spectra may be smoking-gun signals. However, even such distinctive signatures can be mimicked by astrophysical or instrumental causes. We show that velocity spectroscopy-the measurement of energy shifts induced by relative motion of source and observer-can separate these three causes with minimal theoretical uncertainties. The principal obstacle has been energy resolution, but upcoming experiments will reach the required 0.1% level. We show some examples of this application.

Primary author

Ranjan Laha (Stanford University)

Presentation materials