scispace - formally typeset
S

Sean Tulin

Researcher at York University

Publications -  15
Citations -  2626

Sean Tulin is an academic researcher from York University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dark matter & Light dark matter. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 15 publications receiving 2191 citations. Previous affiliations of Sean Tulin include TRIUMF.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

A facility to search for hidden particles at the CERN SPS: the SHiP physics case.

Sergey Alekhin, +95 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the SHiP experiment has a unique potential to discover new physics and can directly probe a number of solutions of beyond the standard model puzzles, such as neutrino masses, baryon asymmetry of the Universe, dark matter, and inflation.
Journal ArticleDOI

A facility to Search for Hidden Particles at the CERN SPS: the SHiP physics case

TL;DR: The SHiP (Search for Hidden Particles) experiment at CERN as discussed by the authors was designed to search for new physics in the largely unexplored domain of very weakly interacting particles with masses below the Fermi scale, inaccessible to the LHC experiments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dark Matter Halos as Particle Colliders: Unified Solution to Small-Scale Structure Puzzles from Dwarfs to Clusters

TL;DR: The results dramatically improve the constraints on SIDM models and may allow the masses of both DM and dark mediator particles to be measured even if the dark sector is completely hidden from the standard model, which is illustrated for the dark photon model.
Journal ArticleDOI

Unified Origin for Baryonic Visible Matter and Antibaryonic Dark Matter

TL;DR: A spectacular signature of this mechanism is the baryon-destroying inelastic scattering of dark matter that can annihilate baryons at appreciable rates relevant for nucleon decay searches.
Journal ArticleDOI

Flavored quantum Boltzmann equations

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors derived from first principles, using nonequilibrium field theory, the quantum Boltzmann equations that describe the dynamics of flavor oscillations, collisions, and a time-dependent mass matrix in the early universe.