Search for features in the spectrum of primordial perturbations using Planck and other datasets

(2015)

Authors:

Paul Hunt, Subir Sarkar

The PDF4LHC report on PDFs and LHC data: results from Run I and preparation for Run II

Journal of Physics G Nuclear and Particle Physics IOP Publishing 42:10 (2015) 103103

Authors:

Juan Rojo, Alberto Accardi, Richard D Ball, Amanda Cooper-Sarkar, Albert de Roeck, Stephen Farry, James Ferrando, Stefano Forte, Jun Gao, Lucian Harland-Lang, Joey Huston, Alexander Glazov, Maxime Gouzevitch, Claire Gwenlan, Katerina Lipka, Mykhailo Lisovyi, Michelangelo Mangano, Pavel Nadolsky, Luca Perrozzi, Ringaile Plačakytė, Voica Radescu, Gavin P Salam, Robert Thorne

Fiducial cross sections for Higgs boson production in association with a jet at next-to-next-to-leading order in QCD

Physical Review D American Physical Society (APS) 92:7 (2015) 074032

Authors:

Fabrizio Caola, Kirill Melnikov, Markus Schulze

Search for dark matter annihilation in the Galactic Center with IceCube-79

European Physical Journal C Springer Berlin Heidelberg 75:10 (2015) 492

Authors:

K Abraham, M Ackermann, J Adams, JA Aguilar, M Ahlers, M Ahrens, D Altmann, T Anderson, M Archinger, C Arguelles, TC Arlen, J Auffenberg, X Bai, SW Barwick, V Baum, R Bay, JJ Beatty, JB Tjus, K-H Becker, E Beiser, S BenZvi, P Berghaus, D Berley, E Bernardini

Abstract:

The Milky Way is expected to be embedded in a halo of dark matter particles, with the highest density in the central region, and decreasing density with the halo-centric radius. Dark matter might be indirectly detectable at Earth through a flux of stable particles generated in dark matter annihilations and peaked in the direction of the Galactic Center. We present a search for an excess flux of muon (anti-) neutrinos from dark matter annihilation in the Galactic Center using the cubic-kilometer-sized IceCube neutrino detector at the South Pole. There, the Galactic Center is always seen above the horizon. Thus, new and dedicated veto techniques against atmospheric muons are required to make the southern hemisphere accessible for IceCube. We used 319.7 live-days of data from IceCube operating in its 79-string configuration during 2010 and 2011. No neutrino excess was found and the final result is compatible with the background. We present upper limits on the self-annihilation cross-section, (Formula presented.), for WIMP masses ranging from 30 GeV up to 10 TeV, assuming cuspy (NFW) and flat-cored (Burkert) dark matter halo profiles, reaching down to ≃4·10-24 cm3 s-1, and ≃2.6·10-23 cm3 s-1 for the νν¯ channel, respectively.

The Heterotic Superpotential and Moduli

(2015)

Authors:

Xenia de la Ossa, Edward Hardy, Eirik Eik Svanes