Search for extended gamma-ray emission from the Virgo galaxy cluster with Fermi-LAT
M. Ackermann, M. Ajello, A. Albert, W. B. Atwood, L. Baldini, G., Barbiellini, D. Bastieri, K. Bechtol, R. Bellazzini, E. Bissaldi, E. D., Bloom, R. Bonino, E. Bottacini, T. J. Brandt, J. Bregeon, P. Bruel, R., Buehler, S. Buson, G. A. Caliandro, R. A. Cameron, R. Caputo

TL;DR
This study analyzes three years of Fermi-LAT gamma-ray data to search for dark matter signals in the Virgo galaxy cluster, finding extended emission likely due to modeling artifacts and setting limits on dark matter annihilation and cosmic-ray interactions.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed gamma-ray analysis of Virgo with Fermi-LAT, highlighting the impact of interstellar emission models and deriving new constraints on dark matter annihilation cross sections.
Findings
Detected extended gamma-ray emission possibly due to modeling artifacts.
Set upper limits on dark matter annihilation cross section near thermal levels.
Constrained cosmic-ray pressure to less than 6% of thermal pressure.
Abstract
Galaxy clusters are one of the prime sites to search for dark matter (DM) annihilation signals. Depending on the substructure of the DM halo of a galaxy cluster and the cross sections for DM annihilation channels, these signals might be detectable by the latest generation of -ray telescopes. Here we use three years of Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) data, which are the most suitable for searching for very extended emission in the vicinity of nearby Virgo galaxy cluster. Our analysis reveals statistically significant extended emission which can be well characterized by a uniformly emitting disk profile with a radius of 3\deg that moreover is offset from the cluster center. We demonstrate that the significance of this extended emission strongly depends on the adopted interstellar emission model (IEM) and is most likely an artifact of our incomplete description of the IEM in this…
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