Dark matter implications of the WMAP-Planck Haze
Andrey E. Egorov, Jennifer M. Gaskins, Elena Pierpaoli, Davide, Pietrobon

TL;DR
This study explores whether dark matter annihilation could explain the Galactic Center gamma-ray excess by analyzing microwave data from WMAP-Planck, modeling various emission components, and setting limits on dark matter properties.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the microwave Haze in relation to dark matter annihilation, incorporating multiple models and component separation techniques to assess the dark matter contribution.
Findings
The Haze is present at 7% of total sky intensity at 23GHz.
A potential dark matter contribution to the Haze is around 20%.
No definitive detection of dark matter signal due to foreground uncertainties.
Abstract
Gamma rays and microwave observations of the Galactic Center and surrounding areas indicate the presence of anomalous emission, whose origin remains ambiguous. The possibility of dark matter (DM) annihilation explaining both signals through prompt emission at gamma-rays and secondary emission at microwave frequencies from interactions of high-energy electrons produced in annihilation with the Galactic magnetic fields has attracted much interest in recent years. We investigate the DM interpretation of the Galactic Center gamma-ray excess by searching for the associated synchrotron in the WMAP-Planck data. Considering various magnetic field and cosmic-ray propagation models, we predict the synchrotron emission due to DM annihilation in our Galaxy, and compare it with the WMAP-Planck data at 23-70GHz. In addition to standard microwave foregrounds, we separately model the microwave…
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