Determining the WIMP mass using the complementarity between direct and indirect searches and the ILC
arXiv:0804.1976 · doi:10.1088/1475-7516/2009/01/046
Abstract
We study the possibility of identifying dark matter properties from XENON-like 100 kg experiments and the GLAST satellite mission. We show that whereas direct detection experiments will probe efficiently light WIMPs, given a positive detection (at the 10% level for $m_Ï \lesssim 50$ GeV), GLAST will be able to confirm and even increase the precision in the case of a NFW profile, for a WIMP-nucleon cross-section $Ï_{Ï-p} \lesssim 10^{-8}$ pb. We also predict the rate of production of a WIMP in the next generation of colliders (ILC), and compare their sensitivity to the WIMP mass with the XENON and GLAST projects.
32 pages, new figures and a more detailed statistical analysis. Final version to appear in JCAP