Gamma ray and Neutrino fluxes from a cosmological dark matter simulation
E. Athanassoula, F.-S. Ling, E. Nezri, R. Teyssier

TL;DR
This study estimates gamma-ray and neutrino fluxes from dark matter annihilation in a Milky Way-like galaxy using a recent N-body simulation, highlighting potential detection prospects and uncertainties in dark matter distribution.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed flux estimates from a cosmological dark matter simulation with analysis of clump structures and their impact on observational signals.
Findings
Galactic center region is promising for detection.
Individual clumps are likely beyond current detection.
Steeper inner profiles could boost subhalo signals by tenfold.
Abstract
In this paper, we estimate the gamma-ray and neutrino fluxes coming from dark matter annihilation in a Milky Way framework provided by a recent N-BODY HORIZON simulation. We first study the characteristics of the simulation and highlight the mass distribution within the galactic halo. The general dark matter density has a typical power law for large radii, but the inner behaviour is poorly constrained below the resolution of the simulation ( pc). We identify clumps and subclumps and analyze their distribution, as well as their internal structure. Inside the clumps, the power law is rather universal, in the outer part with again strong uncertainties for smaller radii, especially for light clumps. We show a full-sky map of the astrophysical contribution to the gamma-ray or neutrino fluxes in this N-body framework. Using quite model independent and general…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
