Finding the Earth velocity relative to the dark matter halo
Project description
earthspeed
By Benjamin Lillard
For finding the instantaneous velocity of the Earth with respect to the galactic dark matter halo
DESCRIPTION:
This package tracks the effective DM wind velocity for a lab on Earth, including the annual effects from the Earth's orbit around the Sun. The parameters for the Earth-Sun system are taken from Lewin & Smith (1996), with updated values for the Local Standard of Rest (LSR) taken from arXiv:2105.00599. This notebook uses the astropy package to convert galactic coordinates to ICRS, so that the location of the DM wind source on the sky can be expressed using right ascension (RA) and declination. Given a location on Earth, the package can also find the altitude and azimuth angles of the DM wind at any time of day.
A Jupyter notebook "GalacticOrientations" demonstrates how to use the package with a few examples.
References:
J. D. Lewin and P. F. Smith, “Review of mathematics, numerical factors, and corrections for dark matter experiments based on elastic nuclear recoil,” Astropart. Phys. 6 (1996) 87–112.
D. Baxter et al., “Recommended conventions for reporting results from direct dark matter searches,” Eur. Phys. J. C 81 no. 10, (2021) 907, arXiv:2105.00599 [hep-ex].
Project details
Release history Release notifications | RSS feed
Download files
Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.