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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
101

From galaxy clustering to dark matter clustering

Yoo, Jaiyul 23 August 2007 (has links)
No description available.
102

Decaying Dark Matter models at colliders

Dradi, Federico 20 July 2015 (has links)
No description available.
103

Results from the ZEPLIN-III dark matter search experiment

Scovell, Paul Robert January 2011 (has links)
The existence of a significant non-baryonic component to the Universe is widely accepted, with worldwide efforts underway trying to detect this so-called dark matter. The ZEPLIN-III detector utilises liquid xenon (Xe) as a target medium in the search for the expected rare interactions of Weakly Interacting Massive Particles, or WIMPs, with ordinary baryonic matter. The neutralino, arising in supersymmetric extensions to the standard model of particle physics, provides a particularly well-motivated candidate. The ZEPLIN-III experiment, operating in two-phase (liquid/gas) mode, measures both the scintillation and ionisation signatures produced during an interaction. The first science run (FSR) of ZEPLIN-III was performed during three months in 2008. The run culminated in a published result which excluded a WIMP-nucleon interaction cross-section above 8:1 x 10-8 pb for a 60 GeVc-2 WIMP at the 90% confidence level. ZEPLIN-III then entered an upgrade period where the photomultiplier tube (PMT) array, previously the dominant source of background, was replaced with new, ultra-low background, PMTs. The radio-contamination of components used to make these PMTs has been thoroughly studied and their impact on the background rates in ZEPLIN-III characterised. Additionally, a new 1.5 tonne plastic scintillator veto detector was constructed, increasing the ability to reject WIMPlike signals caused by neutron induced nuclear recoil events and improving the γ-ray discrimination capability of ZEPLIN-III. The second science run (SSR) of ZEPLIN-III began in June 2010 and continued for 6 months, with a projected upper limit for the interaction cross-section of 1:52 x 10-8 pb for a 55 GeVc-2 WIMP at the 90% confidence level.
104

Dark Matter: Signs and Genesis/ Matière noire: Signes et Genèse

Lopez Honorez, Laura 26 June 2007 (has links)
<p align="justify">The success of Big Bang Nucleosynthesis (BBN) combined with the detailed analysis of the small imperfections of the Cosmic Microwave Background blackbody spectrum lead to the conclusion that most of the matter content of our universe is made of some non-baryonic material, the dark matter!</p> <p align="justify">In this thesis, we review the compiling indications of dark matter and the so-called freeze-out mechanism which may settle the relic density of the species in the framework of the standard Big Bang model. We also examine principally two methods of detection of dark matter, direct and indirect detection searches.</p> <p align="justify">Let us stress that the Standard Model on its own is unable to provide enough aspirants for the role of dark matter. As a consequence, one has to dig into the tremendous domain of physics "Beyond the Standard Model" in order to have a chance to elucidate the problem of the missing mass.</p> <p align="justify">In this thesis in particular, we consider the Inert Doublet Model (IDM) which includes an additional Higgs doublet, enclosing two neutral scalars candidates for dark matter. We invoke the Standard freeze-out mechanism for the production of dark matter. We get then dark matter candidates in two rather separate mass ranges, one between 40 and 80 GeV, the other one between 400 GeV and 1 TeV. We also show that dark matter annihilation at the galactic center can be at the origin of a gamma-ray flux which can be probed by the future GLAST experiment.</p> <p align="justify">We address a low reheating temperature scenario for the genesis of dark matter in a Left-Right symmetric extension of the Standard Model. The candidate for dark matter is a MeV right-handed neutrino and we show that a baryon-dark matter interaction at the galactic center can be the source of the low energy positrons responsible for the 511 keV gamma-ray excess observed by the INTEGRAL experiment in the galactic bulge region.</p> <p align="justify">Finally, prompted by the possibility to explain the baryon and dark matter rather similar abundances by one single "Matter Genesis" mechanism, we study a non-thermal production mechanism for dark matter. The framework is also Left-Right symmetric and dark candidate is a ~3 GeV right handed neutrino.</p>
105

Dark matter in and around stars

Sivertsson, Sofia January 2009 (has links)
<p>There is by now compelling evidence that most of the matter in the universe is in the form of dark matter, a form of matter quite different from the matter we experience in every day life. The gravitational effects of this dark matter have been observed in many different ways but its true nature is still unknown. In most models dark matter particles can annihilate with each other into standard model particles. The direct or indirect observation of such annihilation products could give important clues for the dark matter puzzle. For signals from dark matter annihilations to be detectable, typically high dark matter densities are required. Massive objects, such as stars, can increase the local dark matter density both via scattering off nucleons and by pulling in dark matter gravitationally as the star forms. Dark matter annihilations outside the star would give rise to gamma rays and this is discussed in the first paper. Furthermore dark matter annihilations inside the star would deposit energy inside the star which, if abundant enough, could alter the stellar evolution. Aspects of this are investigated in the second paper. Finally, local dark matter overdensities formed in the early universe could still be around today; prospects of detecting gamma rays from such clumps are discussed in the third paper.</p> / Introduktionsdelen till en sammanläggningsavhandling
106

Quantum fluctuations during inflation and the development of large scale structure

Roberts, David Gawaine January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
107

Dual mycorrhizal symbiosis in Salix : the role of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in an ectomycorrhizal genus

Haigh, Joanna Marie January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
108

Scale dependence in the properties of galaxy clusters

Lloyd-Davies, Edward Justin January 2001 (has links)
No description available.
109

Veto for the ZEPLIN-III dark matter detector

Barnes, Emma Jayne January 2010 (has links)
Cold dark matter in the form of weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs) is a favoured explanation to the galactic dark matter puzzle and could account for a large proportion of the missing mass of the Universe. There are currently numerous detectors around the world attempting to observe a WIMP signal. The ZEPLIN-III detector is one such device. Utilising liquid xenon as a target medium, identification is based on extraction of scintillation and electroluminescence signals from the two-phase xenon target caused when WIMPs scatter and has recently completed its first science run (FSR). With no WIMP signal observed, ZEPLIN-III has excluded a WIMP-nucleon spin-independent cross section above 8.1 × 10−8 pb (90% confidence limit) for a WIMP mass of 60 GeV/c2 and also set a 90% confidence upper limit of a pure WIMP-neutron spin-dependent cross section of 1.9 × 10−2 pb for a 55 GeV/c2 WIMP mass. However, the focus of this thesis is the future of the ZEPLIN-III detector with regards to the second science run (SSR). As with all dark matter detectors, background reduction from neutrons and gamma-rays plays a significant part in obtaining competitive WIMP detection sensitivities. The author has contributed significantly to the design, development and testing of a low radioactivity veto for the ZEPLIN-III detector, to be retrofitted in time for the SSR. It will detect neutrons and gamma-rays in coincidence with the ZEPLIN-III target allowing these events to be removed as candidate WIMP events. This thesis describes the author’s contribution to the design, construction, testing and evaluation of the veto. Also discussed is the development of a comprehensive Monte Carlo simulation, utilised to aid in the design process, to determine the background rates emanating from the veto components (and therefore possible impact on the low sensitivity running of ZEPLIN-III), and to provide an accurate estimation of the overall veto efficiency to reject coincident neutrons and gamma-rays. The veto will have a neutron rejection factor of 67%, reducing the expected neutron background in ZEPLIN-III from 0.4 neutrons/year to 0.14 neutrons/year, a significant factor in the event of a possible WIMP observation. In addition to the work performed on the ZEPLIN-III veto, the author has also contributed to the first science run analysis program by profiling the historical evolution of the electron lifetime throughout the FSR, and implementing consideration of this to improve the data quality.
110

Observable Signatures of Young Galaxies

White, S. D. M. 10 1900 (has links)
I review theoretical expectations for the probable appearance of galaxies during their formation phase, placing particular emphasis on the uncertainties in these ideas. Recent models suggest that formation may occur relatively recently, but that young galaxies are less spectacular than previously supposed. They may be analogous to recently discovered high red - shift radio galaxies, and indeed they may have been observed directly in faint galaxy counts. I summarise several other lines of evidence which suggest that galaxy formation may have been a recent process. Finally I give preliminary results from a detailed analytic study of the observable properties of young galaxies in a Cold Dark Matter universe. Predictions are given for faint galaxy counts and redshift distributions, and for the galaxy luminosity function.

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