Gamma-rays from dark matter annihilations strongly constrain the substructure in halos
Anders Pinzke (1), Christoph Pfrommer (2), Lars Bergstrom (1), ((1), Stockholm University, (2) CITA)

TL;DR
This paper uses gamma-ray observations to constrain dark matter substructure in halos, showing that certain models imply detectable gamma-ray signals and setting limits on the minimum subhalo mass, with implications for dark matter theories.
Contribution
It provides new constraints on dark matter substructure mass scale using gamma-ray data and simulations, challenging cold dark matter expectations.
Findings
Gamma-ray observations limit the minimum substructure mass to > 5x10^-3 M_sun.
Future Fermi data could raise this limit to > 10^3 M_sun.
Simulations show gamma-ray emission from cosmic rays mimics dark matter signals.
Abstract
Recently, it has been shown that electrons and positrons from dark matter (DM) annihilations provide an excellent fit to the Fermi, PAMELA, and HESS data. Using this DM model, which requires an enhancement of the annihilation cross section over its standard value to match the observations, we show that it immediately implies an observable level of gamma-ray emission for the Fermi telescope from nearby galaxy clusters such as Virgo and Fornax. We show that this DM model implies a peculiar feature from final state radiation that is a distinctive signature of DM. Using the EGRET upper limit on the gamma-ray emission from Virgo, we constrain the minimum mass of substructures within DM halos to be > 5x10^-3 M_sun -- about four orders of magnitudes larger than the expectation for cold dark matter. This limits the cutoff scale in the linear matter power spectrum to k < 35/kpc which can be…
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