Searching for Dark Matter with X-ray Observations of Local Dwarf Galaxies
Tesla E. Jeltema, Stefano Profumo

TL;DR
This study systematically searches for WIMP dark matter signals in X-ray observations of local dwarf galaxies, setting constraints on dark matter properties and highlighting the potential of future X-ray missions.
Contribution
First systematic analysis of X-ray data from dwarf galaxies for dark matter detection, comparing constraints with gamma-ray observations and discussing future satellite prospects.
Findings
No significant X-ray excess detected.
X-ray constraints are comparable or stronger than gamma-ray limits.
Dark matter models are constrained, especially with substructure considerations.
Abstract
A generic feature of weakly interacting massive particle (WIMP) dark matter models is the emission of photons over a broad energy band resulting from the stable yields of dark matter pair annihilation. Inverse Compton scattering off cosmic microwave background photons of energetic electrons and positrons produced in dark matter annihilation is expected to produce significant diffuse X-ray emission. Dwarf galaxies are ideal targets for this type of dark matter search technique, being nearby, dark matter dominated systems free of any astrophysical diffuse X-ray background. In this paper, we present the first systematic study of X-ray observations of local dwarf galaxies aimed at the search for WIMP dark matter. We outline the optimal energy and angular ranges for current telescopes, and analyze the systematic uncertainties connected to electron/positron diffusion. We do not observe any…
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