Speaker
Dr
Thomas Lacroix
(Laboratoire Univers et Particules de Montpellier)
Description
In the context of dark matter (DM) searches, it is crucial to quantify and reduce theoretical uncertainties affecting predictions of observables that depend on the DM velocity distribution, including event rates in direct searches, velocity-dependent annihilation rates, and microlensing event rates for DM compact objects. The well-known Eddington inversion formalism for the self-consistent reconstruction of the isotropic DM phase-space distribution from a galactic mass model allows one to go beyond the simplistic Maxwell-Boltzmann approximation or direct extrapolations from cosmological simulations, with limited technicalities.
However, this method and its anisotropic extensions can be ill-defined depending on the DM and baryonic content of the galaxy of interest. In this presentation, I will discuss the validity range of the Eddington inversion methods from a theoretical perspective, as well as issues arising from accounting for the finite boundary of a galactic system. I will show how this impacts on observables relevant to DM searches. As an application, I will present very strong novel constraints on p-wave suppressed DM annihilation from positron data.
Primary author
Dr
Thomas Lacroix
(Laboratoire Univers et Particules de Montpellier)