TITEL
Cosmic dust and heavy neutrinos
FöRFATTARE
Elfgren, Erik
INSTITUTION
Tillämpad fysik, maskin- och materialteknik / Fysik
SAMMANFATTNING
This Doctoral thesis treats two subjects.
The first subject is the impact of early dust on the cosmic microwave
background (CMB). The dust that is studied comes from the first generation
of stars, which were hot and short-lived, ending their lives as giant
supernovae. In the supernova explosions, heavy elements, produced through
the
fusion in the stars, were ejected into the interstellar medium. These heavy
elements condensed to form dust, which can absorb and thus perturb the CMB
radiation. The dust contribution to this radiation is calculated and found
negligible. However, since the dust is produced within structures (like
galaxy clusters), it will have a spatial correlation that could be
used to detect it. This correlation is calculated with relevant
assumptions.
The planned Planck satellite could eventually detect and thus confirm this
correlation.
The second subject is heavy neutrinos and their impact on the diffuse
gamma ray background. Neutrinos heavier than M_Z /2 ~ 45 GeV are not
excluded by particle physics data. Stable neutrinos heavier than this might
contribute to the cosmic gamma ray background through annihilation in
distant galaxies as well as to the dark matter content of the universe. The
evolution of the heavy neutrino density in the universe is calculated as a
function of its mass, M_N, and then the subsequent gamma ray spectrum from
annihilation of distant N-Nbar (from 0 < z < 5). The evolution of the heavy
neutrino density in the universe is calculated numerically. In order to
obtain the enhancement due to structure formation in the universe, the
distribution of N is approximated to be proportional to that of dark matter
in the GalICS model. The calculated gamma ray spectrum is compared to the
measured EGRET data. A conservative exclusion region for the heavy neutrino
mass is 100 to 200 GeV, both from EGRET data and our re-evalutation of the
Kamiokande data. The heavy neutrino contribution to dark matter is found to
be at most 15%.
Finally, heavy neutrinos are considered within the context of a preon
model for composite leptons and quarks, where such particles are natural.
The consequences of these are discussed, with emphasis on existing data
from
the particle accelerator LEP at CERN. A numerical method for optimizing
variable cuts in particle physics is also included in the thesis.
ISSN 1402-1544 / ISRN LTU-DT--07/75--SE / NR 2007:75
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