Evidence for extended gamma-ray emission from galaxy clusters
Jiaxin Han (1,2), Carlos S. Frenk (2), Vincent R. Eke (2), Liang Gao, (3,2), Simon D. M. White (4) ((1) Shanghai A.O., (2) ICC Durham, (3) NAOC,, (4) MPA)

TL;DR
This study presents evidence of extended gamma-ray emission from galaxy clusters, suggesting potential dark matter annihilation signals with specific particle mass ranges, and compares these with cosmic ray models.
Contribution
First analysis to identify extended gamma-ray emission from galaxy clusters consistent with dark matter annihilation signals.
Findings
Extended gamma-ray emission detected in Virgo, Fornax, and Coma clusters.
Data favor dark matter models with particle masses 20-60 GeV or 2-10 GeV and >1 TeV.
Significance of dark matter detection is 4.4 sigma in Virgo.
Abstract
We report evidence for extended gamma-ray emission from the Virgo, Fornax and Coma clusters based on a maximum-likelihood analysis of the 3-year Fermi-LAT data. For all three clusters, excess emission is observed within three degrees of the center, peaking at the GeV scale. This emission cannot be accounted for by known Fermi sources or by the galactic and extragalactic backgrounds. If interpreted as annihilation emission from supersymmetric dark matter (DM) particles, the data prefer models with a particle mass in the range 20-60 GeV annihilating into the b-bbar channel, or 2-10 GeV and >1 TeV annihilating into mu-mu final states. Our results are consistent with those obtained by Hooper and Linden from a recent analysis of Fermi-LAT data in the region of the Galactic Centre. An extended DM annihilation profile dominated by emission from substructures is preferred over a simple point…
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