Constraints on a dark matter sub-halo near the Sun from pulsar timing
Sukanya Chakrabarti, Philip Chang, Stefano Profumo, Peter Craig

TL;DR
This study uses pulsar acceleration data to identify and constrain the properties of a nearby dark matter sub-halo, providing tentative evidence for its existence and demonstrating a new method to probe low-mass dark matter structures.
Contribution
First to constrain a dark matter sub-halo near the Sun using pulsar acceleration measurements, introducing a novel astrophysical approach for detecting low-mass dark matter structures.
Findings
Tentative evidence for a ~2.45 x 10^7 M_sun sub-halo near the Sun.
Massive sub-halos (>10^8 M_sun) are disfavored within several kpc of the Sun.
Potential consistency with ΛCDM predictions for low-mass sub-halos.
Abstract
Using pulsar accelerations, we identify and constrain the properties of a dark matter sub-halo in the Galaxy for the first time from analyzing the acceleration field of binary and solitary pulsars. Our MCMC calculations show that this sub-halo has a mass of and is located at Galactocentric coordinates kpc, , , using flat, uninformative priors, where we have modeled the sub-halo as a compact object. The Bayes factors for the models are in the range of 20-40, which indicates tentative evidence (though not yet decisive) for the sub-halo. Modeling the sub-halo with a NFW profile gives a sub-halo mass within the scale radius (0.1 kpc) of , located at ,…
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