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Published July 15, 2009 | public
Journal Article

Gamma-ray background anisotropy from Galactic dark matter substructure

Abstract

Dark matter annihilation in Galactic substructure will imprint characteristic angular signatures on the all-sky map of the diffuse gamma-ray background. We study the gamma-ray background anisotropy due to the subhalos and discuss detectability at the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope. In contrast to earlier work that relies on simulated all-sky maps, we derive analytic formulae that enable to directly compute the angular power spectrum, given parameters of subhalos such as mass function, and radial profile of gamma-ray luminosity. As our fiducial subhalo models, we adopt M^(-1.9) mass spectrum, subhalos radial distribution suppressed toward the Galactic center, and luminosity profile of each subhalo dominated by its smooth component. We find that, for multipole regime corresponding to theta<~5°, the angular power spectrum is dominated by a noiselike term, with suppression due to internal structure of relevant subhalos. If the mass spectrum extends down to Earth-mass scale, then the subhalos would be detected in the anisotropy with Fermi at angular scales of ~10°, if their contribution to the gamma-ray background is larger than ~20%. If the minimum mass is around 10^4M[sun], on the other hand, the relevant angular scale for detection is ~1°, and the anisotropy detection requires that the subhalo contribution to the gamma-ray background intensity is only ~4%. These can be achieved with a modest boost for particle-physics parameters. We also find that the anisotropy analysis could be a more sensitive probe for the subhalos than individual detection. We also study dependence on model parameters, where we reach the similar conclusions for all the models investigated. The analytic approach should be very useful when Fermi data are analyzed, and the obtained angular power spectrum is interpreted in terms of subhalo models.

Additional Information

©2009 The American Physical Society. Received 26 March 2009; revised 25 June 2009; published 23 July 2009. The author is grateful to E. Komatsu for valuable discussions, and thanks G. Bertone, S. K. Lee, and J. M. Siegal-Gaskins for comments. This work was supported by the Sherman Fairchild Foundation. 95.35.+d Dark matter (stellar, interstellar, galactic, and cosmological) 95.85.Pw γ-ray astronomical observations 98.35.Gi Milky Way galaxy halo 98.70.Vc Cosmic background radiations

Additional details

Created:
August 21, 2023
Modified:
October 18, 2023