Prompt cusps are the densest quasi-equilibrium dark matter objects; one forms
at the instant of collapse within every isolated peak of the initial
cosmological density field. They have power-law density profiles, ρ∝r−1.5 with central phase-space density set by the primordial velocity
dispersion of the dark matter. At late times they account for ∼1% of the
dark matter mass but for >90% of its annihilation luminosity in all but the
densest regions, where they are tidally disrupted. Here we demonstrate that
individual stellar encounters, rather than the mean galactic tide, are the
dominant disruptors of prompt cusps within galaxies. Their cumulative effect is
fully (though stochastically) characterised by an impulsive shock strength B∗=2πG∫ρ∗(x(t))dt where ρ∗, the total mass
density in stars, is integrated over a cusp's entire post-formation trajectory.
Stellar encounters and mean tides have only a small effect on the halo
annihilation luminosity seen by distant observers, but this is not true for the
Galactic halo because of the Sun's position. For a 100 GeV WIMP, Earth-mass
prompt cusps are predicted, and stellar encounters suppress their mean
annihilation luminosity by a factor of two already at 20 kpc, so that their
annihilation emission is predicted to appear almost uniform over the sky. The
Galactic Center γ-ray Excess is thus unaffected by cusps. If it is
indeed dark matter annihilation radiation, then prompt cusps in the outer
Galactic halo and beyond must account for 20-80% of the observed isotropic
γ-ray background in the 1 to 10 GeV range.Comment: 22 pages, 23 figures, for a video and code see
https://github.com/jstuecker/cusp-encounter