Abstract

The diffuse galactic EGRET gamma ray data show a clear excess for energies above 1 GeV in comparison with the expectations from conventional galactic models. The excess is seen with the same spectrum in all sky directions, as expected for Dark Matter (DM) annihilation. This hypothesis is investigated in detail. The energy spectrum of the excess is used to limit the WIMP mass to the 50-100 GeV range, while the skymaps are used to determine the halo structure, which is consistent with a triaxial isothermal halo with additional enhancement of Dark Matter in the disc. The latter is strongly correlated with the ring of stars around our galaxy at a distance of 14 kpc, thought to originate from the tidal disruption of a dwarf galaxy. It is shown that this ring of DM with a mass of 21011M\approx 2\cdot 10^{11} M_\odot causes the mysterious change of slope in the rotation curve at R=1.1R0R=1.1R_0 and the large local surface density of the disc. The total mass of the halo is determined to be 31012M3\cdot 10^{12} M_\odot. A cuspy profile is definitely excluded to describe the gamma ray data. These signals of Dark Matter Annihilation are compatible with Supersymmetry for boost factors of 20 upwards and have a statistical significance of more than 10σ10\sigma in comparison with the conventional galactic model. The latter combined with all features mentioned above provides an intriguing hint that the EGRET excess is indeed indirect evidence for Dark Matter Annihilation.Comment: To be published in Proc. of DM 2004, Feb. 2004, Los Angeles; updated references and somewhat improved fits in new versio

    Similar works

    Full text

    thumbnail-image

    Available Versions

    Last time updated on 13/02/2019