Characterization of Dark-Matter-induced anisotropies in the diffuse gamma-ray background
Mattia Fornasa, Jesus Zavala, Miguel A. Sanchez-Conde, Jennifer M., Siegal-Gaskins, Timur Delahaye, Francisco Prada, Mark Vogelsberger, Fabio, Zandanel, Carlos S. Frenk

TL;DR
This study models the anisotropies in the diffuse gamma-ray background caused by dark matter, using advanced simulations to estimate the angular power spectrum and assess its detectability against Fermi-LAT data.
Contribution
It provides a detailed prediction of dark matter-induced gamma-ray anisotropies incorporating state-of-the-art simulations and extrapolation methods, highlighting the uncertainties involved.
Findings
Dark matter-induced anisotropies are comparable to observed gamma-ray anisotropies.
Uncertainties in low-mass subhalo abundance significantly affect predictions.
The angular power spectrum can potentially constrain dark matter models.
Abstract
The Fermi-LAT collaboration has recently reported the detection of angular power above the photon noise level in the diffuse gamma-ray background between 1 and 50 GeV. Such signal can be used to constrain a possible contribution from Dark-Matter-induced photons. We estimate the intensity and features of the angular power spectrum (APS) of this potential Dark Matter (DM) signal, for both decaying and annihilating DM candidates, by constructing template all-sky gamma-ray maps for the emission produced in the galactic halo and its substructures, as well as in extragalactic (sub)halos. The DM distribution is given by state-of-the-art N-body simulations of cosmic structure formation, namely Millennium-II for extragalactic (sub)halos, and Aquarius for the galactic halo and its subhalos. We use a hybrid method of extrapolation to account for (sub)structures that are below the resolution limit…
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