Characterizing the Nature of the Unresolved Point Sources in the Galactic Center
Laura J. Chang, Siddharth Mishra-Sharma, Mariangela Lisanti, Malte, Buschmann, Nicholas L. Rodd, Benjamin R. Safdi

TL;DR
This study evaluates the Non-Poissonian Template Fitting method's ability to distinguish unresolved point sources from dark matter signals in the Galactic Center, highlighting its robustness and limitations under various modeling scenarios.
Contribution
The paper provides an extensive simulation-based analysis of NPTF's effectiveness in identifying unresolved sources and dark matter, clarifying its reliability and potential pitfalls.
Findings
NPTF accurately distinguishes pure dark matter or point source signals when backgrounds are perfectly modeled.
In mixed scenarios, NPTF may misattribute flux between dark matter and point sources.
Diffuse background mismodeling can cause NPTF to falsely identify point sources or miss signals.
Abstract
The Galactic Center Excess (GCE) of GeV gamma rays can be explained as a signal of annihilating dark matter or of emission from unresolved astrophysical sources, such as millisecond pulsars. Evidence for the latter is provided by a statistical procedure---referred to as Non-Poissonian Template Fitting (NPTF)---that distinguishes the smooth distribution of photons expected for dark matter annihilation from a "clumpy" photon distribution expected for point sources. In this paper, we perform an extensive study of the NPTF on simulated data, exploring its ability to recover the flux and luminosity function of unresolved sources at the Galactic Center. When astrophysical background emission is perfectly modeled, we find that the NPTF successfully distinguishes between the dark matter and point source hypotheses when either component makes up the entirety of the GCE. When the GCE is a mixture…
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