It is widely believed that dark matter exists within galaxies and clusters of
galaxies. Under the assumption that this dark matter is composed of the
lightest, stable supersymmetric particle, assumed to be the neutralino, the
feasibility of its indirect detection via observations of a diffuse gamma-ray
signal due to neutralino annihilations within M31 is examined. To this end,
first the dark matter halo of the close spiral galaxy M31 is modeled from
observations, then the resultant gamma-ray flux is estimated within
supersymmetric model configurations. We conclude that under favorable
conditions such as the rapid accretion of neutralinos on the central black hole
in M31 and/or the presence of many clumps inside its halo with r−3/2 inner
profiles, a neutralino annihilation gamma-ray signal is marginally detectable
by the ongoing collaboration CELESTE.Comment: Latex, 32 pages, 12 figures, 5 table