Recognition: unknown
Implications of High-Resolution Simulations on Indirect Dark Matter Searches
read the original abstract
We study the prospects for detecting the annihilation products of Dark Matter [DM] in the framework of the two highest-resolution numerical simulations currently available, i.e. {\it Via Lactea II} and {\it Aquarius}. We propose a strategy to determine the shape and size of the region around the Galactic center that maximizes the probability of observing a DM signal, and we show that although the predicted flux can differ by a factor of 10 for a given DM candidate in the two simulation setups, the search strategy remains actually unchanged, since it relies on the angular profile of the annihilation flux, not on its normalization. We present mock gamma-ray maps that keep into account the diffuse emission produced by unresolved halos in the Galaxy, and we estimate that in an optimistic DM scenario a few individual clumps can be resolved above the background with the Fermi-LAT. Finally we calculate the energy-dependent boost factors for positrons and antiprotons, and show that they are always of $\cal O$(1), and therefore they cannot lead to the large enhancements of the antimatter fluxes required to explain the recent PAMELA, ATIC, Fermi and HESS data.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
Forward citations
Cited by 1 Pith paper
-
A Comprehensive Study of WIMP Models Explaining the Fermi-LAT Galactic Center Excess
WIMP models for the Galactic Center Excess survive only in finely tuned resonant funnels with portal couplings around 10^-4, with leptophilic vectors and pseudoscalar portals remaining most viable after current bounds.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.