169 research outputs found
Tentative observation of a gamma-ray line at the Fermi LAT
Using 43 months of public gamma-ray data from the Fermi Large Area Telescope,
we find in regions close to the Galactic center at energies of 130 GeV a 4.6
sigma excess that is not inconsistent with a gamma-ray line from dark matter
annihilation. When taking into account the look-elsewhere effect, the
significance of the observed signature is 3.2 sigma. If interpreted in terms of
dark matter particles annihilating into a photon pair, the observations imply a
partial annihilation cross-section of about 10^-27 cm^3s^-1 and a dark matter
mass around 130 GeV. We review aspects of the statistical analysis and comment
on possible instrumental indications.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, Proceedings of the 5th International Symposium on
High-Energy Gamma-Ray Astronomy (Gamma2012
Gamma Ray Signals from Dark Matter: Concepts, Status and Prospects
Weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs) remain a prime candidate for the
cosmological dark matter (DM), even in the absence of current collider signals
that would unambiguously point to new physics below the TeV scale. The
self-annihilation of these particles in astronomical targets may leave
observable imprints in cosmic rays of various kinds. In this review, we focus
on gamma rays which we argue to play a pronounced role among the various
possible messengers. We discuss the most promising spectral and spatial
signatures to look for, give an update on the current state of gamma-ray
searches for DM and an outlook concerning future prospects. We also assess in
some detail the implications of a potential signal identification for particle
DM models as well as for our understanding of structure formation. Special
emphasis is put on the possible evidence for a 130 GeV line-like signal that
was recently identified in the data of the Fermi gamma-ray space telescope.Comment: 42 pages, 6 figures, 2 tables; updated reference list and extended
discussio
Indirect Searches for Decaying Dark Matter
Numerous observations point towards the existence of an unknown elementary
particle with no electromagnetic interactions, a large population of which was
presumably produced in the early stages of the history of the Universe. This
so-called dark matter has survived until the present day, accounting for the
26% of the present energy budget of the Universe. It remains an open question
whether the particles comprising the dark matter are absolutely stable or
whether they have a finite but very long lifetime, which is a possibility since
there is no known general principle guaranteeing perfect stability. In this
article we review the observational limits on the lifetime of dark matter
particles with mass in the GeV-TeV range using observations of the cosmic
fluxes of antimatter, gamma-rays and neutrinos. We also examine some
theoretically motivated scenarios that provide decaying dark matter candidates.Comment: 47 pages, 11 figures, 6 tables. Invited review for the International
Journal of Modern Physics A. Matches published versio
A Fresh Approach to Forecasting in Astroparticle Physics and Dark Matter Searches
We present a toolbox of new techniques and concepts for the efficient
forecasting of experimental sensitivities. These are applicable to a large
range of scenarios in (astro-)particle physics, and based on the Fisher
information formalism. Fisher information provides an answer to the question
what is the maximum extractable information from a given observation?. It is a
common tool for the forecasting of experimental sensitivities in many branches
of science, but rarely used in astroparticle physics or searches for particle
dark matter. After briefly reviewing the Fisher information matrix of general
Poisson likelihoods, we propose very compact expressions for estimating
expected exclusion and discovery limits (equivalent counts method). We
demonstrate by comparison with Monte Carlo results that they remain
surprisingly accurate even deep in the Poisson regime. We show how correlated
background systematics can be efficiently accounted for by a treatment based on
Gaussian random fields. Finally, we introduce the novel concept of Fisher
information flux. It can be thought of as a generalization of the commonly used
signal-to-noise ratio, while accounting for the non-local properties and
saturation effects of background and instrumental uncertainties. It is a
powerful and flexible tool ready to be used as core concept for informed
strategy development in astroparticle physics and searches for particle dark
matter.Comment: 33 pages, 12 figure
Strong support for the millisecond pulsar origin of the Galactic center GeV excess
Using gamma-ray data from the Fermi Large Area Telescope, various groups have
identified a clear excess emission in the Inner Galaxy, at energies around a
few GeV. This excess resembles remarkably well a signal from dark-matter
annihilation. One of the most compelling astrophysical interpretations is that
the excess is caused by the combined effect of a previously undetected
population of dim gamma-ray sources. Because of their spectral similarity, the
best candidates are millisecond pulsars. Here, we search for this hypothetical
source population, using a novel approach based on wavelet decomposition of the
gamma-ray sky and the statistics of Gaussian random fields. Using almost seven
years of Fermi-LAT data, we detect a clustering of photons as predicted for the
hypothetical population of millisecond pulsar, with a statistical significance
of 10.0 sigma. For plausible values of the luminosity function, this population
explains 100% of the observed excess emission. We argue that other
extragalactic or Galactic sources, a mismodeling of Galactic diffuse emission,
or the thick-disk population of pulsars are unlikely to account for this
observation.Comment: 6+10 pages, 3+10 figures, 1 table; v2 updated to pass 8 Fermi data,
additional supplemental material with extended discussion (conclusions
unchanged); v3 matches PRL version with further checks (conclusions
unchanged
The GeV Excess Shining Through: Background Systematics for the Inner Galaxy Analysis
Recently, a spatially extended excess of gamma rays collected by the
Fermi-LAT from the inner region of the Milky Way has been detected by different
groups and with increasingly sophisticated techniques. Yet, any final
conclusion about the morphology and spectral properties of such an extended
diffuse emission are subject to a number of potentially critical uncertainties,
related to the high density of cosmic rays, gas, magnetic fields and abundance
of point sources. We will present a thorough study of the systematic
uncertainties related to the modelling of diffuse background and to the
propagation of cosmic rays in the inner part of our Galaxy. We will test a
large set of models for the Galactic diffuse emission, generated by varying the
propagation parameters within extreme conditions. By using those models in the
analysis of Fermi-LAT data as Galactic foreground, we will show that the
gamma-ray excess survives and we will quantify the uncertainties affecting the
excess morphology and energy spectrum.Comment: 2014 Fermi Symposium proceedings - eConf C14102.1 7 pages, 4 figure
The role of the eROSITA all-sky survey in searches for sterile neutrino dark matter
We investigate for the first time the potential of angular auto- and
cross-correlation power spectra in identifying sterile neutrino dark matter in
the cosmic X-ray background. We take as reference the performance of the
soon-to-be-launched eROSITA satellite. The main astrophysical background
sources against sterile neutrino decays are active galactic nuclei, galaxies
powered by X-ray binaries, and clusters of galaxies. While sterile neutrino
decays are always subdominant in the auto-correlation power spectra, they can
be efficiently enhanced when cross-correlating with tracers of the dark matter
distribution such as galaxies in the 2MASS catalogues. We show that the planned
four-years eROSITA all-sky survey will provide a large enough photon statistics
to potentially yield very stringent constraints on the decay lifetime, enabling
to firmly test the recently claimed 3.56-keV X-ray line found towards several
clusters and galaxies and its decaying dark matter interpretation. However, we
also show that in order to fully exploit the potential of eROSITA for dark
matter searches, it is vital to overcome the shot-noise limitations inherent to
galaxy catalogues as tracers for the dark matter distribution.Comment: 26 pages, 12 figures, version accepted by JCA
Updated cosmic-ray and radio constraints on light dark matter: Implications for the GeV gamma-ray excess at the Galactic center
The apparent gamma-ray excess in the Galactic center region and inner Galaxy
has attracted considerable interest, notably because both its spectrum and
radial distribution are consistent with an interpretation in terms of
annihilating dark matter particles with a mass of about 10-40 GeV. We confront
such an interpretation with an updated compilation of various indirect dark
matter detection bounds, which we adapt to the specific form required by the
observed signal. We find that cosmic-ray positron data strongly rule out dark
matter annihilating to light leptons, or 'democratically' to all leptons, as an
explanation of the signal. Cosmic-ray antiprotons, for which we present
independent and significantly improved limits with respect to previous
estimates, are already in considerable tension with DM annihilation to any
combination of quark final states; the first set of AMS-02 data will thus be
able to rule out or confirm the DM hypothesis with high confidence. For
reasonable assumptions about the magnetic field in the Galactic center region,
radio observations independently put very severe constraints on a DM
interpretation of the excess, in particular for all leptonic annihilation
channels.Comment: 23 pages revtex, 19 figures, 1 table. Extended discussion of
antiproton limits and added references. Matches published versio
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