4–6 May 2015
University of Pittsburgh
US/Eastern timezone

Towards a Bullet-proof test for indirect signals of dark matter

4 May 2015, 15:45
15m
G29 (University of Pittsburgh)

G29

University of Pittsburgh

Pittsburgh, PA 15260
parallel talk Dark Matter I

Speaker

Timothy Wiser (Stanford University)

Description

Merging galaxy clusters such as the Bullet Cluster provide a powerful testing ground for indirect detection of dark matter. The spatial distribution of the dark matter is both directly measurable through gravitational lensing and substantially different from the distribution of potential astrophysical backgrounds. We propose to use this spatial information to identify the origin of indirect detection signals, and we show that even statistical excesses of a few sigma can be robustly tested for consistency---or inconsistency---with a dark matter source. For example, our methods, combined with already-existing observations of the Coma Cluster, would allow the 3.55 keV line to be tested for compatibility with a dark matter origin. We also discuss the optimal spatial reweighting of photons for indirect detection searches. The current discovery rate of merging galaxy clusters and associated lensing maps strongly motivates deep exposures in these dark matter targets for both current and upcoming indirect detection experiments in the X-ray and gamma-ray bands. [\[arXiv:1502.03824\]][1] [1]: http://arxiv.org/abs/1502.03824

Authors

Ken Van Tilburg (Stanford) Peter Graham (Stanford) Surjeet Rajendran (UC Berkeley) Timothy Wiser (Stanford University)

Presentation materials