Searches for Dark Matter annihilation signatures in the Segue 1 satellite galaxy with the MAGIC-I telescope
The MAGIC Collaboration (and others): J. Aleksi\'c (1), E. A. Alvarez, (2), L. A. Antonelli (3), P. Antoranz (4), M. Asensio (2), M. Backes (5), J., A. Barrio (2), D. Bastieri (6), J. Becerra Gonz\'alez (7,8), W. Bednarek (9),, A. Berdyugin (10), K. Berger (7,8)

TL;DR
This study used the MAGIC-I telescope to search for gamma-ray signals from dark matter annihilation in Segue 1, setting upper limits that challenge some dark matter models but are limited by astrophysical uncertainties.
Contribution
First detailed gamma-ray search for dark matter in Segue 1 with MAGIC-I, providing upper limits and model constraints relevant for indirect dark matter detection.
Findings
No significant gamma-ray emission detected.
Upper limits constrain dark matter annihilation models.
Data challenge some models explaining PAMELA positron excess.
Abstract
We report the results of the observation of the nearby satellite galaxy Segue 1 performed by the MAGIC-I ground-based gamma-ray telescope between November 2008 and March 2009 for a total of 43.2 hours. No significant gamma-ray emission was found above the background. Differential upper limits on the gamma-ray flux are derived assuming various power-law slopes for the possible emission spectrum. Integral upper limits are also calculated for several power-law spectra and for different energy thresholds. The values are of the order of 10^{-11} ph cm^{-2}$ s^{-1} above 100 GeV and 10^{-12} ph cm^{-2} s^{-1} above 200 GeV. Segue 1 is currently considered one of the most interesting targets for indirect dark matter searches. In these terms, the upper limits have been also interpreted in the context of annihilating dark matter particles. For such purpose, we performed a grid scan over a…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
