We consider the observation of diffuse halos of light around the discs of
spiral galaxies, as a probe of the interaction cross section between Dark
Matter and photons. Using the galaxy M101 as an example, we show that for a
scattering cross section at the level of 10^(-23) x (m/GeV) cm^2 or greater
Dark Matter in the halo will scatter light out from the more luminous centre of
the disc to larger radii, contributing to an effective increased surface
brightness at the edges of the observed area on the sky. This allows us to set
an upper limit on the DM-photon cross section using data from the Dragonfly
instrument. We then show how to improve this constraint, and the potential for
discovery, by combining the radial profile of DM-photon scattering with
measurements at multiple wavelengths. Observation of diffuse light presents a
new and potentially powerful way to probe the interactions of Dark Matter with
photons, which is complimentary to existing searches.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures: v2 matches version accepted to PRL, with an
extended discussion of potential background