Searching for dark matter in X-rays: how to check the dark matter origin of a spectral feature
Alexey Boyarsky, Oleg Ruchayskiy, Dmytro Iakubovskyi, Matthew G., Walker, Signe Riemer-Sorensen, Steen H. Hansen

TL;DR
This study tests the dark matter origin of a 2.5 keV spectral line by analyzing X-ray data from multiple celestial objects, ultimately excluding the dark matter decay hypothesis for this feature.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates a method to distinguish dark matter signals from astrophysical or instrumental features by analyzing their spatial distribution, providing a robust test for the dark matter origin of spectral lines.
Findings
No evidence of a dark matter decay line at 2.5 keV in analyzed data.
Strong exclusion of the dark matter decay hypothesis for the 0912.0552 line.
Highlights the importance of spatial distribution analysis in dark matter searches.
Abstract
A signal from decaying dark matter (DM) can be unambiguously distinguished from spectral features of astrophysical or instrumental origin by studying its spatial distribution. We demonstrate this approach by examining the recent claim of 0912.0552 regarding the possible DM origin of the 2.5 keV line in Chandra observations of the Milky Way satellite known as Willman 1. Our conservative strategy is to adopt a relatively large dark mass for Willman 1 and relatively small dark masses for the comparison objects. We analyze archival observations by XMM-Newton of M31 and Fornax dwarf spheroidal galaxy (dSph) and Chandra observations of Sculptor dSph. By performing a conservative analysis of X-ray spectra, we show the absence of a DM decay line with parameters consistent with those of 0912.0552. For M31, the observations of the regions between 10 and 20 kpc from the center, where the…
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