English

Dark Matter Annihilation in Substructures Revised

Astrophysics 2008-11-26 v3 High Energy Physics - Phenomenology

Abstract

Upcoming γ\gamma-ray satellites will search for Dark Matter annihilations in Milky Way substructures (or 'clumps'). The prospects for detecting these objects strongly depend on the assumptions made on the distribution of Dark Matter in substructures, and on the distribution of substructures in the Milky Way halo. By adopting simplified, yet rather extreme, prescriptions for these quantities, we compute the number of sources that can be detected with upcoming experiments such as GLAST, and show that, for the most optimistic particle physics setup (mχ=40m_\chi=40 GeV and annihilation cross section σv=3×1026\sigma v = 3 \times 10^{-26} cm3^3 s1^{-1}), the result ranges from zero to \sim hundred sources, all with mass above 105M10^{5}M\odot. However, for a fiducial DM candidate with mass mχ=100m_\chi=100 GeV and σv=1026\sigma v = 10^{-26} cm3^3 s1^{-1}, at most a handful of large mass substructures can be detected at 5σ5 \sigma, with a 1-year exposure time, by a GLAST-like experiment. Scenarios where micro-clumps (i.e. clumps with mass as small as 106M10^{-6}M\odot) can be detected are severely constrained by the diffuse γ\gamma-ray background detected by EGRET.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0706.2101,
  title  = {Dark Matter Annihilation in Substructures Revised},
  author = {L. Pieri and G. Bertone and E Branchini},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0706.2101},
  year   = {2008}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-21T08:38:28.042Z