27–31 Aug 2018
LVH, Luisenstraße 58, 10117 Berlin
Europe/Berlin timezone

Evidence Against a Dark Matter Explanation of the Galactic Center Excess

31 Aug 2018, 14:20
20m
-4- Robert Koch

-4- Robert Koch

Talk Dark Matter Dark Matter

Speaker

Roland Crocker (Australian National University)

Description

An anomalous, apparently diffuse, gamma-ray signal not readily attributable to known Galactic sources has been found in Fermi space telescope data covering the central ~10 degrees of the Galaxy. This "Galactic Center Gamma-Ray Excess" (GCE) signal has a spectral peak at ~2 GeV and reaches its maximum intensity at the Galactic Centre (GC) from where it falls off as a radial power law ~r^{-2.4}. Given its morphological and spectral characteristics, the GCE is ascribable to self-annihilation of dark matter particles governed by an Navarro-Frenk-White-like density profile. However, it could also be composed of many dim, unresolved point sources for which millisecond pulsars (MSPs) or pulsars would be natural candidates given their GeV-peaked spectra. Statistical evidence that many sub-threshold point sources contribute up to 100% of the GCE signal has recently been claimed. We have developed a novel analysis that exploits hydrodynamical modelling to better register the position of gamma-ray emitting gas in the Inner Galaxy. Our improved analysis reveals that the excess gamma-rays are spatially correlated with stellar structures of the Galactic Bulge and Centre. Given these correlations, we argue that the excess is not a dark matter phenomenon but rather associated with very old stars in the Inner Galaxy

Primary authors

Dr Roland Crocker (Australian National University) Roland Crocker (Australian National University)

Presentation materials