IceCube - Astrophysics and Astroparticle Physics at the South Pole
ArXiv 1111.5188 (2011)
Abstract:
The IceCube Neutrino Observatory at the South Pole has been completed in December 2010. In this paper we describe the final detector and report results on physics and performance using data taken at different stages of the yet incomplete detector. No signals for cosmic neutrinos from point sources and diffuse fluxes have been found. Prospects of these searches, including the setup of multi-messenger programs, are discussed. The limits on neutrinos from GRBs, being far below model predictions, require a reevaluation of GRB model assumptions. Various measurements of cosmic ray properties have been obtained from atmospheric muon and neutrino spectra and from air shower measurements; these results will have an important impact on model developments. IceCube observed an anisotropy of cosmic rays on multiple angular scales, for the first time in the Southern sky. The unique capabilities of IceCube for monitoring transient low energy events are briefly discussed. Finally an outlook to planned extensions is given which will improve the sensitivities both on the low and high energy side.The Atiyah class and complex structure stabilization in heterotic Calabi-Yau compactifications
Journal of High Energy Physics 2011:10 (2011)
Abstract:
Holomorphic gauge fields in N = 1 supersymmetric heterotic compactifications can constrain the complex structure moduli of a Calabi-Yau manifold. In this paper, the tools necessary to use holomorphic bundles as a mechanism for moduli stabilization are systematically developed. We review the requisite deformation theory - including the Atiyah class, which determines the deformations of the complex structure for which the gauge bundle becomes non-holomorphic and, hence, non-supersymmetric. In addition, two equivalent approaches to this mechanism of moduli stabilization are presented. The first is an efficient computational algorithm for determining the supersymmetric moduli space, while the second is an F-term potential in the four-dimensional theory associated with vector bundle holomorphy. These three methods are proven to be rigorously equivalent. We present explicit examples in which large numbers of complex structure moduli are stabilized. Finally, higher-order corrections to the moduli space are discussed. © 2011 SISSA.Lower Limits on the Strengths of Gamma Ray Lines from WIMP Dark Matter Annihilation
(2011)
The IceCube Neutrino Observatory VI: Neutrino Oscillations, Supernova Searches, Ice Properties
ArXiv 1111.2731 (2011)