Exploring the Gradient of a Scalar in Dark Matter Velocity Analysis

Written by phenomenology | Published 2024/10/28
Tech Story Tags: quantum-mechanics | dark-matter | vector-wave-dark-matter | dark-matter-detection | quantum-sensing-technology | terrestrial-quantum-sensors | the-dark-photon-field | three-peak-analysis

TLDRThis article examines the gradient of a scalar in relation to local dark matter velocity, noting a preferential direction aligned with the z-axis. By analyzing amplitude variations and deriving the marginalized likelihood, we simplify the integral through variable redefinitions, making it analytically tractable.via the TL;DR App

Authors:

(1) Dorian W. P. Amaral, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Rice University and These authors contributed approximately equally to this work;

(2) Mudit Jain, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Rice University, Theoretical Particle Physics and Cosmology, King’s College London and These authors contributed approximately equally to this work;

(3) Mustafa A. Amin, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Rice University;

(4) Christopher Tunnell, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Rice University.

Table of Links

Abstract and 1 Introduction

2 Calculating the Stochastic Wave Vector Dark Matter Signal

2.1 The Dark Photon Field

2.2 The Detector Signal

3 Statistical Analysis and 3.1 Signal Likelihood

3.2 Projected Exclusions

4 Application to Accelerometer Studies

4.1 Recasting Generalised Limits onto B − L Dark Matter

5 Future Directions

6 Conclusions, Acknowledgments, and References

A Equipartition between Longitudinal and Transverse Modes

B Derivation of Marginal Likelihood with Stochastic Field Amplitude

C Covariance Matrix

D The Case of the Gradient of a Scalar

D The Case of the Gradient of a Scalar

In this case, there is a preferential direction because ∇a points in the direction of the local DM velocity. Aligning the lab’s working coordinate system such that this local velocity vector is parallel to the z axis, the amplitudes associated with the three different directions in Eq. (2.9) are not all the same. Effectively, there is an extra factor associated with the z direction, and the random signal in frequency space (c.f. Eq. (2.9)) takes the following form

where (and following the notation of [45])

Proceeding similarly as in Appendix B, the marginalized likelihood is

which we can evaluate by proceeding in the same fashion as in Appendix B; i.e. making redefinitions of the variables so they become independent and the integral becomes analytically tractable. We arrive at the following:

where

This paper is available on arxiv under CC BY 4.0 DEED license.


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Published by HackerNoon on 2024/10/28