Pulsars Cannot Account for the Inner Galaxy's GeV Excess
Dan Hooper, Ilias Cholis, Tim Linden, Jennifer Siegal-Gaskins, and, Tracy Slatyer

TL;DR
The paper demonstrates that millisecond pulsars cannot explain the GeV gamma-ray excess in the Inner Galaxy, supporting the dark matter annihilation hypothesis.
Contribution
It provides a detailed spectral and population analysis showing millisecond pulsars are insufficient to account for the observed gamma-ray excess.
Findings
Millisecond pulsars have a too soft spectrum at sub-GeV energies.
Population models limit pulsar contribution to ~10%.
Results strongly disfavor pulsars as the source of the excess.
Abstract
Using data from the Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope, a spatially extended component of gamma rays has been identified from the direction of the Galactic Center, peaking at energies of ~2-3 GeV. More recently, it has been shown that this signal is not confined to the innermost hundreds of parsecs of the Galaxy, but instead extends to at least ~3 kpc from the Galactic Center. While the spectrum, intensity, and angular distribution of this signal is in good agreement with predictions from annihilating dark matter, it has also been suggested that a population of unresolved millisecond pulsars could be responsible for this excess GeV emission from the Inner Galaxy. In this paper, we consider this later possibility in detail. Comparing the observed spectral shape of the Inner Galaxy's GeV excess to the spectrum measured from 37 millisecond pulsars by Fermi, we find that these sources exhibit…
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