We revisit the calculation of electroweak bremsstrahlung contributions to
dark matter annihilation. Dark matter annihilation to leptons is necessarily
accompanied by electroweak radiative corrections, in which a W or Z boson
is also radiated. Significantly, while many dark matter models feature a
helicity suppressed annihilation rate to fermions, bremsstrahlung process can
remove this helicity suppression such that the branching ratios Br(ℓνW), Br(ℓ+ℓ−Z), and Br(νˉνZ) dominate over
Br(ℓ+ℓ−) and Br(νˉν). We find this is most significant in
the limit where the dark matter mass is nearly degenerate with the mass of the
boson which mediates the annihilation process. Electroweak bremsstrahlung has
important phenomenological consequences both for the magnitude of the total
dark matter annihilation cross section and for the character of the
astrophysical signals for indirect detection. Given that the W and Z gauge
bosons decay dominantly via hadronic channels, it is impossible to produce
final state leptons without accompanying protons, antiprotons, and gamma rays.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures; replaced to match published versio