McGill.CA / Science / Department of Physics

Physical Society Colloquium

Illuminating Dark Matter

Neil Weiner

Center for Cosmology and Particle Physics
New York University

The existence of dark mater has been confirmed by a wide variety of experiments, on a wide variety of length scales. However, the nature of the dark matter remains elusive. One intriguing class of candidates - weakly interacting massive particles or “WIMPs” - offer the prospect of detection in cosmic rays, in direct detection experiments, and at colliders. Of late, there has been an increasing set of experimental signals, principally from cosmic rays, which may be providing a first sign of dark matter. I will explore the range of signals and anomalies, and the challenges of understanding all of them in terms of dark matter. We will see that, if dark matter is responsible for these anomalies, it may be pointing us to a much richer set of physics in the dark sector.

Friday, October 23rd 2009, 15:30
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, Keys Auditorium (room 103)