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Sterile neutrino dark matter

  1. Title statementSterile neutrino dark matter / Alexander Merle. [elektronický zdroj]
    PublicationSan Rafael [California] (40 Oak Drive, San Rafael, CA, 94903, USA) : Morgan & Claypool Publishers, [2017]
    DistributionBristol [England] (Temple Circus, Temple Way, Bristol BS1 6HG, UK) : IOP Publishing, [2017]
    Phys.des.1 online resource (various pagings) : illustrations (some color).
    ISBN9781681744810 (online)
    9781681744834 mobi
    Edition[IOP release 3]
    IOP concise physics, ISSN 2053-2571
    Note"Version: 20170301"--Title page verso.
    "A Morgan & Claypool publication as part of IOP Concise Physics"--Title page verso.
    Internal Bibliographies/Indexes NoteIncludes bibliographical references.
    ContentsPreface -- 1. Introduction : dark matter--what we do and do not know -- 1.1. Observational evidence for dark matter -- 1.2. Explanations for dark matter -- 1.3. Sterile neutrinos as dark matter
    Content note2. Sterile neutrinos--almost part of the Standard Model -- 2.1. Fermion masses in the Standard Model -- 2.2. Why neutrino masses seem peculiar -- 2.3. Explaining sterile neutrino masses and mixings. 3. Dark matter---fossils from the early Universe -- 3.1. General thoughts on dark matter production -- 3.2. Thermal freeze-out -- 3.3. Non-thermal distribution functions -- 3.4. Production mechanisms for keV sterile neutrinos. 4. A very big small effect--production by active-sterile mixing -- 4.1. The freeze-in mechanism -- 4.2. Non-resonant production : Dodelson-Widrow mechanism -- 4.3. Resonant production : Shi-Fuller mechanism. 5. Resurrection from the downfall--production by particle decays -- 5.1. Two-step production of dark matter -- 5.2. Scalar freezing in -- 5.3. Scalar freezing out -- 5.4. The Dodelson-Widrow modification. 6. The emergence of order--cosmic structure formation -- 6.1. The Tremaine-Gunn bound -- 6.2. The free-streaming horizon -- 6.3. The evolution equations for cosmic structure formation -- 6.4. The matter power spectrum -- 6.5. Bounds from and implications for structure formation. 7. Consult the stars for an answer--astrophysical signals -- 7.1. The radiative decay of the sterile neutrino -- 7.2. Pulsar kicks -- 7.3. Bounds from supernovae -- 7.4. Putting all astrophysical constraints together. 8. The needle in the dark haystack--experimental attempts -- 8.1. Single beta decay -- 8.2. Electron capture decays -- 8.3. Sterile neutrino capture on stable nuclei -- 8.4. Drawing conclusions from active-neutrino experiments and getting a global picture -- 9. What to take home--conclusions and outlook.
    Notes to AvailabilityPřístup pouze pro oprávněné uživatele
    AudienceSuitable for anybody starting from graduate or senior undergraduate student level in physics or astronomy. While the main target group is graduate students who want to start working on the topic, the text is equally suitable for active researchers who either aim to enter the topic or who are already experts in one of the fields involved but want to get introduced to other aspects of sterile neutrino Dark Matter. A basic knowledge of the standard models of particle physics and of cosmology is needed to understand the text, however, many aspects are briefly reviewed, too.
    NoteZpůsob přístupu: World Wide Web.. Požadavky na systém: Adobe Acrobat Reader.
    Another responsib. Morgan & Claypool Publishers,
    Institute of Physics (Great Britain),
    Subj. Headings Dark matter (Astronomy) * Neutrinos. * Cosmology & the universe. * Particle & high-energy physics. * Quantum physics (quantum mechanics & quantum field theory) * SCIENCE / Physics / Quantum Theory. * SCIENCE / Physics / Condensed Matter. * SCIENCE / Cosmology.
    Form, Genre elektronické knihy electronic books
    CountryKalifornie
    Languageangličtina
    Document kindElectronic books
    URLPlný text pro studenty a zaměstnance UPOL
    book

    book


    This book is a new look at one of the hottest topics in contemporary science, Dark Matter. It is the pioneering text dedicated to sterile neutrinos as candidate particles for Dark Matter, challenging some of the standard assumptions which may be true for some Dark Matter candidates but not for all. So, this can be seen either as an introduction to a specialized topic or an out-of-the-box introduction to the field of Dark Matter in general. No matter if you are a theoretical particle physicist, an observational astronomer, or a ground-based experimentalist, no matter if you are a grad student or an active researcher, you can benefit from this text, for a simple reason: a non-standard candidate for Dark Matter can teach you a lot about what we truly know about our standard picture of how the Universe works.

    Preface -- 1. Introduction : dark matter--what we do and do not know -- 1.1. Observational evidence for dark matter -- 1.2. Explanations for dark matter -- 1.3. Sterile neutrinos as dark matter2. Sterile neutrinos--almost part of the Standard Model -- 2.1. Fermion masses in the Standard Model -- 2.2. Why neutrino masses seem peculiar -- 2.3. Explaining sterile neutrino masses and mixings3. Dark matter---fossils from the early Universe -- 3.1. General thoughts on dark matter production -- 3.2. Thermal freeze-out -- 3.3. Non-thermal distribution functions -- 3.4. Production mechanisms for keV sterile neutrinos4. A very big small effect--production by active-sterile mixing -- 4.1. The freeze-in mechanism -- 4.2. Non-resonant production : Dodelson-Widrow mechanism -- 4.3. Resonant production : Shi-Fuller mechanism5. Resurrection from the downfall--production by particle decays -- 5.1. Two-step production of dark matter -- 5.2. Scalar freezing in -- 5.3. Scalar freezing out -- 5.4. The Dodelson-Widrow modification6. The emergence of order--cosmic structure formation -- 6.1. The Tremaine-Gunn bound -- 6.2. The free-streaming horizon -- 6.3. The evolution equations for cosmic structure formation -- 6.4. The matter power spectrum -- 6.5. Bounds from and implications for structure formation7. Consult the stars for an answer--astrophysical signals -- 7.1. The radiative decay of the sterile neutrino -- 7.2. Pulsar kicks -- 7.3. Bounds from supernovae -- 7.4. Putting all astrophysical constraints together8. The needle in the dark haystack--experimental attempts -- 8.1. Single beta decay -- 8.2. Electron capture decays -- 8.3. Sterile neutrino capture on stable nuclei -- 8.4. Drawing conclusions from active-neutrino experiments and getting a global picture -- 9. What to take home--conclusions and outlook.

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