Prompt cusps and the dark matter annihilation signal
M. Delos, und S. White. (2022)cite arxiv:2209.11237Comment: 19 pages, 10 figures; submitted.
Zusammenfassung
Dark matter is the dominant form of matter in today's universe. Its
gravitational effects drive the formation of galaxies and all larger structure,
yet its nature is unknown. As gravitational collapse creates the first cosmic
objects, a dark matter cusp forms immediately at every initial density maximum.
Such prompt cusps have a density profile $\rhor^-1.5$ extending up to
a limiting density dependent on the nature of the dark matter. Numerical
simulations and theoretical arguments suggest that the bulk of these cusps
survive until the present day. Here we show that if dark matter is a thermally
produced weakly interacting massive particle, many thousands of prompt cusps
with individual masses similar to that of the earth should be present in every
solar mass of dark matter. This radically alters predictions for the amount and
spatial distribution of dark matter annihilation radiation, substantially
tightening observational constraints on the relevant cross sections. In
particular, the cross section required to explain the observed $\gamma$-ray
excess near the Galactic Centre predicts prompt cusp emission from the Milky
Way's outer halo and from extragalactic dark matter at levels in tension with
the observed diffuse $\gamma$-ray background.
Beschreibung
Prompt cusps and the dark matter annihilation signal
%0 Generic
%1 delos2022prompt
%A Delos, M. Sten
%A White, Simon D. M.
%D 2022
%K tifr
%T Prompt cusps and the dark matter annihilation signal
%U http://arxiv.org/abs/2209.11237
%X Dark matter is the dominant form of matter in today's universe. Its
gravitational effects drive the formation of galaxies and all larger structure,
yet its nature is unknown. As gravitational collapse creates the first cosmic
objects, a dark matter cusp forms immediately at every initial density maximum.
Such prompt cusps have a density profile $\rhor^-1.5$ extending up to
a limiting density dependent on the nature of the dark matter. Numerical
simulations and theoretical arguments suggest that the bulk of these cusps
survive until the present day. Here we show that if dark matter is a thermally
produced weakly interacting massive particle, many thousands of prompt cusps
with individual masses similar to that of the earth should be present in every
solar mass of dark matter. This radically alters predictions for the amount and
spatial distribution of dark matter annihilation radiation, substantially
tightening observational constraints on the relevant cross sections. In
particular, the cross section required to explain the observed $\gamma$-ray
excess near the Galactic Centre predicts prompt cusp emission from the Milky
Way's outer halo and from extragalactic dark matter at levels in tension with
the observed diffuse $\gamma$-ray background.
@misc{delos2022prompt,
abstract = {Dark matter is the dominant form of matter in today's universe. Its
gravitational effects drive the formation of galaxies and all larger structure,
yet its nature is unknown. As gravitational collapse creates the first cosmic
objects, a dark matter cusp forms immediately at every initial density maximum.
Such prompt cusps have a density profile $\rho\propto r^{-1.5}$ extending up to
a limiting density dependent on the nature of the dark matter. Numerical
simulations and theoretical arguments suggest that the bulk of these cusps
survive until the present day. Here we show that if dark matter is a thermally
produced weakly interacting massive particle, many thousands of prompt cusps
with individual masses similar to that of the earth should be present in every
solar mass of dark matter. This radically alters predictions for the amount and
spatial distribution of dark matter annihilation radiation, substantially
tightening observational constraints on the relevant cross sections. In
particular, the cross section required to explain the observed $\gamma$-ray
excess near the Galactic Centre predicts prompt cusp emission from the Milky
Way's outer halo and from extragalactic dark matter at levels in tension with
the observed diffuse $\gamma$-ray background.},
added-at = {2022-09-26T16:49:48.000+0200},
author = {Delos, M. Sten and White, Simon D. M.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/28a4a1e97c0eb165553a3fbd6e4fc7a1a/citekhatri},
description = {Prompt cusps and the dark matter annihilation signal},
interhash = {4929643cdf84e8fc7fd7d077b0fa50b5},
intrahash = {8a4a1e97c0eb165553a3fbd6e4fc7a1a},
keywords = {tifr},
note = {cite arxiv:2209.11237Comment: 19 pages, 10 figures; submitted},
timestamp = {2022-09-26T16:49:48.000+0200},
title = {Prompt cusps and the dark matter annihilation signal},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/2209.11237},
year = 2022
}