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Published June 27, 2011 | Published
Journal Article Open

WIMP astronomy and particle physics with liquid-noble and cryogenic direct-detection experiments

Abstract

Once weakly-interacting massive particles (WIMPs) are unambiguously detected in direct-detection experiments, the challenge will be to determine what one may infer from the data. Here, I examine the prospects for reconstructing the local speed distribution of WIMPs in addition to WIMP particle-physics properties (mass, cross sections) from next-generation cryogenic and liquid-noble direct-detection experiments. I find that the common method of fixing the form of the velocity distribution when estimating constraints on WIMP mass and cross sections means losing out on the information on the speed distribution contained in the data and may lead to biases in the inferred values of the particle-physics parameters. I show that using a more general, empirical form of the speed distribution can lead to good constraints on the speed distribution. Moreover, one can use Bayesian model-selection criteria to determine if a theoretically-inspired functional form for the speed distribution (such as a Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution) fits better than an empirical model. The shape of the degeneracy between WIMP mass and cross sections and their offset from the true values of those parameters depends on the hypothesis for the speed distribution, which has significant implications for consistency checks between direct-detection and collider data. In addition, I find that the uncertainties on theoretical parameters depends sensitively on the upper end of the energy range used for WIMP searches. Better constraints on the WIMP particle-physics parameters and speed distribution are obtained if the WIMP search is extended to higher energy (~1  MeV).

Additional Information

© 2011 American Physical Society. Received 11 April 2011; published 27 June 2011. I thank Vera Gluscevic, Kim Griest, Greg Martinez, Bernard Sadoulet, Pat Scott, and Roberto Trotta for useful discussions, and the Aspen Center for Physics for its hospitality while part of this work was completed. This work made use of the University of California, Irvine, Greenplanet computing cluster. This research was supported by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, the Center for Cosmology at UC Irvine, NASA Grant No. NNX09AD09G, and NSF Grant No. 0855462.

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