Galaxy Clusters as Reservoirs of Heavy Dark Matter and High-Energy Cosmic Rays: Constraints from Neutrino Observations
Kohta Murase, John F. Beacom

TL;DR
This paper explores how neutrino and gamma-ray observations of galaxy clusters can constrain models of dark matter and cosmic rays, highlighting the potential of multi-messenger astrophysics for understanding these large structures.
Contribution
It demonstrates the use of high-energy neutrino and gamma-ray data to probe dark matter and cosmic ray processes in galaxy clusters, accounting for uncertainties and electromagnetic cascades.
Findings
Neutrino telescopes can detect signals from dark matter and cosmic rays in galaxy clusters.
Gamma-ray observations constrain high-energy emissions and dark matter masses.
Multi-messenger approaches improve understanding of galaxy cluster emissions.
Abstract
Galaxy Clusters (GCs) are the largest reservoirs of both dark matter and cosmic rays (CRs). Dark matter self-annihilation can lead to a high luminosity in gamma rays and neutrinos, enhanced by a strong degree of clustering in dark matter substructures. Hadronic CR interactions can also lead to a high luminosity in gamma rays and neutrinos, enhanced by the confinement of CRs from cluster accretion/merger shocks and active galactic nuclei. We show that IceCube/KM3Net observations of high-energy neutrinos can probe the nature of GCs and the separate dark matter and CR emission processes, taking into account how the results depend on the still-substantial uncertainties. Neutrino observations are relevant at high energies, especially at >10 TeV. Our results should be useful for improving experimental searches for high-energy neutrino emission. Neutrino telescopes are sensitive to extended…
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