Spherical harmonics analysis of Fermi gamma-ray data and the Galactic dark matter halo
Abstract
We argue that the decomposition of gamma-ray maps in spherical harmonics is a sensitive tool to study dark matter (DM) annihilation or decay in the main Galactic halo of the Milky Way. Using the spherical harmonic decomposition in a window excluding the Galactic plane, we show for 1 yr of Fermi data that adding a spherical template (such as a line-of-sight DM annihilation profile) to an astrophysical background significantly reduces χ2 of the fit to the data. In some energy bins the significance of this DM fraction is above three sigma. This can be viewed as a hint of a DM annihilation signal, although astrophysical sources cannot be ruled out at this moment. We use the derived DM fraction as a conservative upper limit on the DM annihilation signal. In the case of bb¯ annihilation channel the limits are about a factor of 2 less constraining than the limits from dwarf galaxies. The uncertainty of our method is dominated by systematics related to modeling the astrophysical background. We show that with 1 yr of Fermi data the statistical sensitivity would be sufficient to detect DM annihilation with thermal freeze-out cross section for masses below 100 GeV.
- Publication:
-
Physical Review D
- Pub Date:
- July 2011
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:1007.4556
- Bibcode:
- 2011PhRvD..84b3013M
- Keywords:
-
- 95.85.Pw;
- 95.35.+d;
- 95.55.Ka;
- 98.70.Rz;
- gamma-ray;
- Dark matter;
- X- and gamma-ray telescopes and instrumentation;
- gamma-ray sources;
- gamma-ray bursts;
- Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena;
- Astrophysics - Galaxy Astrophysics;
- High Energy Physics - Phenomenology
- E-Print:
- 16 pages, 10 figures, 1 table