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Constraints on the Dark Matter Annihilations by Neutrinos with Substructure Effects Included

Astrophysics 2009-11-13 v2 High Energy Physics - Phenomenology

Abstract

Dark matter (DM) annihilations in the Galaxy may produce high energy neutrinos, which can be detected by the neutrino telescopes, for example IceCube, ANTARES and Super-Kamiokande. The neutrinos can also arise from hadronic interaction between cosmic ray and atmosphere around the Earth, known as atmospheric neutrino. Current measurements on neutrino flux is consistent with theoretical prediction of atmospheric neutrino within the uncertainties. In this paper, by requiring that the DM annihilation neutrino flux is less than the current measurements, we obtain an upper bound on the cross section of dark matter annihilation <σv> < {\sigma v} >. Compared with previous investigations, we improve the bound by including DM substructure contributions. In our paper, two kinds of substructure effects are scrutinized. One is the substructure average contribution over all directions. The other is point source effect by single massive sub-halo. We found that the former can improve the bound by several times, while the latter can improve the bound by 101104 10^1 \sim 10^4 utilizing the excellent angular resolution of neutrino telescope IceCube. The exact improvement depends on the DM profile and the sub-halo concentration model. In some model, IceCube can achieve the sensitivity of <σv>1026cm3s1 < {\sigma v} > \sim 10^{- 26} cm^3 s^{- 1} .

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0806.3689,
  title  = {Constraints on the Dark Matter Annihilations by Neutrinos with Substructure Effects Included},
  author = {Peng-fei Yin and Jia Liu and Qiang Yuan and Xiao-jun Bi and Shou-hua Zhu},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0806.3689},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

19 pages, 5 figures, 1 table

R2 v1 2026-06-21T10:53:27.187Z