Search for dark matter signals towards a selection of recently-detected DES dwarf galaxy satellites of the Milky Way with H.E.S.S
H.E.S.S. Collaboration: H. Abdallah, R. Adam, F. Aharonian, F. Ait, Benkhali, E. O. Ang\"uner, M. Arakawa, C. Arcaro, C. Armand, T. Armstrong, H., Ashkar, M. Backes, V. Baghmanyan, V. Barbosa Martins, A. Barnacka, M., Barnard, Y. Becherini, D. Berge, K. Bernl\"ohr, M. B\"ottcher

TL;DR
This study used H.E.S.S. observations to search for gamma-ray signals from newly discovered DES dwarf galaxies, setting new constraints on dark matter annihilation cross sections in the TeV mass range.
Contribution
First to analyze DES dwarf galaxies with H.E.S.S., providing novel constraints on dark matter annihilation cross sections from these recently discovered satellites.
Findings
No significant gamma-ray excess detected.
Established the most stringent gamma-ray constraints in the multi-TeV range.
Complemented existing results from other gamma-ray observatories.
Abstract
Dwarf spheroidal galaxy satellites of the Milky Way are prime targets for indirect detection of dark matter with gamma rays due to their proximity, high dark matter content and absence of non-thermal emission processes. Recently, the Dark Energy Survey (DES) revealed the existence of new ultra-faint dwarf spheroidal galaxies in the southern-hemisphere sky, therefore ideally located for ground-based observations with the imaging atmospheric Cherenkov telescope array H.E.S.S. We present a search for very-high-energy ( GeV) gamma-ray emission using H.E.S.S. observations carried out recently towards Reticulum II, Tucana II, Tucana III, Tucana IV and Grus II satellites. No significant very-high-energy gamma-ray excess is found from the observations on any individual object nor in the combined analysis of all the datasets. Using the most recent modeling of the dark matter…
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