University of Leicester
Browse

Dark matter annihilation and decay in dwarf spheroidal galaxies: the classical and ultrafaint dSphs

journal contribution
posted on 2016-03-09, 11:43 authored by V. Bonnivard, C. Combet, M. Daniel, S. Funk, A. Geringer-Sameth, J. A. Hinton, D. Maurin, J. I. Read, S. Sarkar, M. G. Walker, Mark Ivor Wilkinson
Dwarf spheroidal (dSph) galaxies are prime targets for present and future γ-ray telescopes hunting for indirect signals of particle dark matter. The interpretation of the data requires careful assessment of their dark matter content in order to derive robust constraints on candidate relic particles. Here, we use an optimized spherical Jeans analysis to reconstruct the ‘astrophysical factor’ for both annihilating and decaying dark matter in 21 known dSphs. Improvements with respect to previous works are: (i) the use of more flexible luminosity and anisotropy profiles to minimize biases, (ii) the use of weak priors tailored on extensive sets of contamination-free mock data to improve the confidence intervals, (iii) systematic cross-checks of binned and unbinned analyses on mock and real data, and (iv) the use of mock data including stellar contamination to test the impact on reconstructed signals. Our analysis provides updated values for the dark matter content of 8 ‘classical’ and 13 ‘ultrafaint’ dSphs, with the quoted uncertainties directly linked to the sample size; the more flexible parametrization we use results in changes compared to previous calculations. This translates into our ranking of potentially-brightest and most robust targets – namely Ursa Minor, Draco, Sculptor – and of the more promising, but uncertain targets – namely Ursa Major 2, Coma – for annihilating dark matter. Our analysis of Segue 1 is extremely sensitive to whether we include or exclude a few marginal member stars, making this target one of the most uncertain. Our analysis illustrates challenges that will need to be addressed when inferring the dark matter content of new ‘ultrafaint’ satellites that are beginning to be discovered in southern sky surveys.

History

Citation

Monthly Notices Of The Royal Astronomical Society, 2015, 453 (1), pp. 849-867 (19)

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Physics and Astronomy

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Monthly Notices Of The Royal Astronomical Society

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

issn

0035-8711

eissn

1365-2966

Acceptance date

2015-07-13

Copyright date

2015

Available date

2016-03-09

Publisher version

http://mnras.oxfordjournals.org/content/453/1/849

Language

en