CTA in the Context of Searches for Particle Dark Matter - a glimpse
Jan Conrad (OKC, Stockholm)

TL;DR
This paper discusses the potential role of Cherenkov Telescopes (CTAs) in detecting particle dark matter, especially WIMPs, comparing their sensitivity and prospects with collider and underground detection methods within the context of supersymmetry and other models.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of CTA's sensitivity to WIMP dark matter against other detection methods, focusing on model-dependent reach estimates and specific supersymmetric scenarios.
Findings
CTA is more likely to detect multi-TeV WIMPs.
Direct detection and LHC have better prospects for lower mass WIMPs.
Updated muon magnetic moment measurements impact CTA's role in supersymmetry searches.
Abstract
In this contribution, CTAs potential role in detection of particle dark matter in the context of other detection approaches is briefly discussed for an audience of gamma-ray astronomers. In particular searches for new particles at the large hadron collider and detection of dark matter particles in deep underground detectors are considered. We will focus on Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (WIMP). Approaches will be compared in terms of (a) robustness of sensitivity predictions, (b) timeline and (c) reach. The estimate of the reach will be model-dependent. Given our ignorance about the nature of dark matter, and the complementarity of detection techniques even within a given framework (e.g. Supersymmetry), the trivial conclusion is that we might need all approaches and the most sensitive experiments. Our discussion will be somewhat more restrictive in order to be able to be more…
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