We use a new mass modelling method, GravSphere, to measure the central dark
matter density profile of the Draco dwarf spheroidal galaxy. Draco's star
formation shut down long ago, making it a prime candidate for hosting a
'pristine' dark matter cusp, unaffected by stellar feedback during galaxy
formation. We first test GravSphere on a suite of tidally stripped mock
'Draco'-like dwarfs. We show that we are able to correctly infer the dark
matter density profile of both cusped and cored mocks within our 95% confidence
intervals. While we obtain only a weak inference on the logarithmic slope of
these density profiles, we are able to obtain a robust inference of the
amplitude of the inner dark matter density at 150pc, ρDM(150pc). We show that, combined with constraints on the density profile at larger
radii, this is sufficient to distinguish a Λ Cold Dark Matter
(ΛCDM) cusp − that has ρDM(150pc)>1.8×108M⊙kpc−3− from alternative dark matter models
that have lower inner densities. We then apply GravSphere to the real Draco
data. We find that Draco has an inner dark matter density of ρDM(150pc)=2.4−0.6+0.5×108M⊙kpc−3, consistent with a ΛCDM cusp. Using a velocity independent
SIDM model, calibrated on ΛSIDM cosmological simulations, we show that
Draco's high central density gives an upper bound on the SIDM cross section of
σ/m<0.57cm2g−1 at 99% confidence. We conclude that
the inner density of nearby dwarf galaxies like Draco provides a new and
competitive probe of dark matter models.Comment: 19 pages, 11 Figures. Final version accepted for publication in MNRA