Gamma Rays from Clusters and Groups of Galaxies: Cosmic Rays versus Dark Matter
Tesla E. Jeltema, John Kehayias, Stefano Profumo

TL;DR
This paper evaluates the potential of the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope to distinguish gamma-ray emissions from cosmic rays and dark matter in galaxy clusters, proposing observational strategies and analyzing their effectiveness.
Contribution
It provides data-driven predictions and methods to differentiate gamma-ray signals from cosmic rays and dark matter in galaxy clusters using Fermi observations.
Findings
Gamma-ray signals from CR and DM can be comparable in clusters.
Poor clusters and groups may have the highest DM to CR emission ratio.
Distinguishing DM from CR gamma-ray spectra is feasible for high-mass DM particles.
Abstract
Clusters of galaxies have not yet been detected at gamma-ray frequencies; however, the recently launched Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope, formerly known as GLAST, could provide the first detections in the near future. Clusters are expected to emit gamma rays as a result of (1) a population of high-energy primary and re-accelerated secondary cosmic rays (CR) fueled by structure formation and merger shocks, active galactic nuclei and supernovae, and (2) particle dark matter (DM) annihilation. In this paper, we ask the question of whether the Fermi telescope will be able to discriminate between the two emission processes. We present data-driven predictions for a large X-ray flux limited sample of galaxy clusters and groups. We point out that the gamma ray signals from CR and DM can be comparable. In particular, we find that poor clusters and groups are the systems predicted to have the…
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