What the Milky Way’s dwarfs tell us about the Galactic Center extended gamma-ray excess

Ryan E. Keeley, Kevork N. Abazajian, Anna Kwa, Nicholas L. Rodd, and Benjamin R. Safdi
Phys. Rev. D 97, 103007 – Published 10 May 2018

Abstract

The Milky Way’s Galactic Center harbors a gamma-ray excess that is a candidate signal of annihilating dark matter. Dwarf galaxies remain predominantly dark in their expected commensurate emission. In this work we quantify the degree of consistency between these two observations through a joint likelihood analysis. In doing so we incorporate Milky Way dark matter halo profile uncertainties, as well as an accounting of diffuse gamma-ray emission uncertainties in dark matter annihilation models for the Galactic Center extended gamma-ray excess (GCE) detected by the Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope. The preferred range of annihilation rates and masses expands when including these unknowns. Even so, using two recent determinations of the Milky Way halo’s local density leaves the GCE preferred region of single-channel dark matter annihilation models to be in strong tension with annihilation searches in combined dwarf galaxy analyses. A third, higher Milky Way density determination, alleviates this tension. Our joint likelihood analysis allows us to quantify this inconsistency. We provide a set of tools for testing dark matter annihilation models’ consistency within this combined data set. As an example, we test a representative inverse Compton sourced self-interacting dark matter model, which is consistent with both the GCE and dwarfs.

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  • Received 17 October 2017

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.97.103007

© 2018 American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Particles & FieldsGravitation, Cosmology & Astrophysics

Authors & Affiliations

Ryan E. Keeley1,*, Kevork N. Abazajian1,†, Anna Kwa1,‡, Nicholas L. Rodd2,§, and Benjamin R. Safdi3,¶

  • 1Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, California 92697, USA
  • 2Center for Theoretical Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, USA
  • 3Michigan Center for Theoretical Physics, Department of Physics, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109, USA

  • *rkeeley@uci.edu
  • kevork@uci.edu
  • akwa@uci.edu
  • §nrodd@mit.edu
  • bsafdi@umich.edu

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Issue

Vol. 97, Iss. 10 — 15 May 2018

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