4.6 Article

Global constraints on effective dark matter interactions: relic density, direct detection, indirect detection, and collider

Journal

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1475-7516/2012/05/001

Keywords

dark matter theory; dark matter simulations

Funding

  1. National Science Council of Taiwan [99-2112-M-007-005-MY3, 98-2112-M-001-014-MY3]
  2. WCU program through the KOSEF
  3. MEST [R31-2008-000-10057-0]
  4. Welcome Programme of the Foundation for Polish Science
  5. National Research Foundation of Korea [R31-2012-000-10057-0] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)

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An effective interaction approach is used to describe the interactions between the spin 0 or spin 1/2 dark matter particle and the degrees of freedom of the standard model. This approach is applicable to those models in which the dark matter particles do not experience the standard-model interactions, e. g., hidden-sector models. We explore the effects of these effective interaction operators on (i) dark matter relic density, (ii) spin-independent and spin-dependent dark matter-nucleon scattering cross sections, (iii) cosmic antiproton and gamma ray fluxes from the galactic halo due to dark matter annihilation, and (iv) monojet and monophoton production plus missing energy at the Tevatron and the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). We combine the experimental data of relic density from WMAP7, spin-independent cross section from XENON100, spin-dependent cross section from XENON10, ZEPLIN-III, and SIMPLE, cosmic antiproton flux from PAMELA, cosmic gamma-ray flux from Fermi-LAT, and the monojet and monophoton data from the Tevatron and the LHC, to put the most comprehensive limits on each effective operator.

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