Gamma-rays from Dark Matter Mini
Transcript
Gamma-rays from Dark Matter Mini
Gamma-rays from Dark Matter Mini-Spikes in Andromeda Galaxy M31 Mattia Fornasa Dipartimento di Fisica “G. Galilei” I.N.F.N. Padova based on astro-ph/0703757 by M. Fornasa, M. Taoso and G.Bertone Journal Club Seminar – Giovedì 7 giugno 2007 Introduction Evidences for Dark Matter (DM) • WMAP measurement ( m=0.25) • rotation curves of galaxies • the “bullet” cluster Open Problems • DM nature • DM interactions Detection techniques • signals from colliders • direct detection • indirect detection of annihilation products such as neutrinos, antiprotons or gamma-rays M. Fornasa Chandra photo album: X-ray image of 1E0657-558 7 Giugno 2007 Introduction Our work is focused on indirect detection: we are looking for gamma-rays from DM annihilation in high-density regions in the sky (1) • search for a signal from the Galactic Center • H.E.S.S. reported an excess of gamma-rays no possible interpretation as DM annihilation H.E.S.S. collaboration, astro-ph/0610509 M. Fornasa 7 Giugno 2007 Introduction • Intermediate Mass Black Holes (IMBHs) • located in mini-halos in the Galactic smooth DM profile • necessity to consider an extragalactic source (M31) G. Bertone, astro-ph/ 0603148 High-energy, point-like, unknown gamma-rays sources in a 3° region around Andromeda would be a clear and unquestionable signal for DM annihilations around IMBHs M. Fornasa 7 Giugno 2007 Intermediate Mass Black Holes (IMBHs) • mass from 20 M to 106 M • no one actually ever “detected” an Intermediate Mass Black Hole G. Bertone, astro-ph/ 0603148 Evidences for IMBHs: • Ultra Luminous X-ray sources (ULXs) • extrapolation of Mrelation of SMBHs to globular clusters • IMBHs would provide massive seeds for the growth of SMBHs Miller, Colbert, astro-ph/0308402 M. Fornasa 7 Giugno 2007 Intermediate Mass Black Holes (IMBHs) 1111111111111111111111 0000000000000000000000 0000000000000000000000 1111111111111111111111 0000000000000000000000 1111111111111111111111 0000000000000000000000 1111111111111111111111 0000000000000000000000 1111111111111111111111 0000000000000000000000 1111111111111111111111 0000000000000000000000 1111111111111111111111 0000000000000000000000 1111111111111111111111 0000000000000000000000 1111111111111111111111 0000000000000000000000 1111111111111111111111 0000000000000000000000 1111111111111111111111 0000000000000000000000 1111111111111111111111 0000000000000000000000 1111111111111111111111 0000000000000000000000 1111111111111111111111 0000000000000000000000 1111111111111111111111 0000000000000000000000 1111111111111111111111 0000000000000000000000 1111111111111111111111 0000000000000000000000 1111111111111111111111 0000000000000000000000 1111111111111111111111 0000000000000000000000 1111111111111111111111 0000000000000000000000 1111111111111111111111 0000000000000000000000 1111111111111111111111 G. Bertone, astro-ph/ 0603148 Koushiappas, Bullock, Dekel, astro-ph/0311487 M. Fornasa 7 Giugno 2007 Spike formation at the Galactic center [M /kpc 3] Galactic halo density profile is supposed to be a Navarro-Frenk-White (NFW): (3) 9 10 8 10 107 106 105 104 3 10 102 G. Bertone, astro-ph/ 0603148 From a power-law density profile, a “spike” can form with a new slope: 10 1 10-1 -2 10 10-1 1 10 102 3 10 r [kpc] (4) (5) M. Fornasa 7 Giugno 2007 Spike formation at the Galactic center Ullio, Zhao, Kamionkowski, astro-ph/0101481 G. Bertone, astro-ph/ 0603148 From a NFW ( =-1) the final spike has sp=-7/3 (6) (7) M. Fornasa 7 Giugno 2007 Spike formation at the Galactic center Arguments against spikes formation: • off-center black hole formation • gravitational interaction with stars • merger and BH binary effects G. Bertone, astro-ph/ 0603148 Ullio, Zhao, Kamionkowski, astro-ph/0101481 M. Fornasa Merritt, Milosavljevic, Verde, Jimenez astro-ph/0201376 7 Giugno 2007 IMBHs catalogue (Bertone, Zentner, Silk) Focusing on astro-ph/0509565 by G. Bertone, A. Zentner and J. Silk: • initial catalogue of IMBHs • merging tree • selection of unmerged mini-halos • no baryonic content and the BH lays in the center G. Bertone, astro-ph/ 0603148 Bertone, Zentner, Silk, Astro-ph/0509565 M. Fornasa 7 Giugno 2007 IMBHs catalogue for Andromeda How IMBHs are characterized: • realization ID • Black Hole Mass [M ] • IMBH distance from the center of the Galaxy [kpc] • rsp [kpc] • (rsp) [M /kpc3] G. Bertone, astro-ph/ 0603148 Milky Way Andromeda Distance to the center 8.5 kpc 784.0 kpc Virial Mass 1.0B1012 M 6.8B1011 M Virial Radius 205 kpc 180 kpc Andromeda IMBHs are 65.2±14.5 per realization, with an average mass of 1.5B105 M and an average distance from M31 center of 32.3 kpc. M. Fornasa 7 Giugno 2007 Annihilation Flux (8) G. Bertone, astro-ph/ 0603148 To compute the differential energy spectrum a particular model of physics beyond the SM is needed: (9) (10) M. Fornasa 7 Giugno 2007 Differential energy spectrum FPS (Fornengo-Pieri-Scopel) • MSSM is assumed and the DM candidate is the lightest neutralino • focused on hadronization of b quarks • fit from simulated data, using standard package as PYTHIA (x=E/m ) (10) G. Bertone, astro-ph/ 0603148 a=-1.5 b=0.37 c=-16.05 d=18.01 e=-19.50 for m =1 TeV M. Fornasa 7 Giugno 2007 Thresold effect (11) (12) (Ethr=4 GeV) G. Bertone, astro-ph/ 0603148 M. Fornasa m = 50 GeV 5.26B10-11 cm-2s-1 m = 150 GeV 7.65B10-11 cm-2s-1 m = 300 GeV 6.92B10-11 cm-2s-1 m = 500 GeV 5.81B10-11 cm-2s-1 Ethr m ACTs 100 GeV 1 TeV GLAST 4 GeV (see later) 150 GeV 7 Giugno 2007 Detection of IMBHs with ACTs • m =1 TeV and v=3B10-26 cm3s-1 • Eth=100 GeV • typical ACT angular resolution is 0.1° • typical ACT effective area is 3B104 m2 • exposure time is 100 hours M. Fornasa 7 Giugno 2007 Detection of IMBHs with ACTs (13) Origin of background: • EGRET: (14) • Hadronic and electronic: (15) (16) M. Fornasa 7 Giugno 2007 Detection of IMBHs with ACTs ACT sensitivity for a 5 detection results 1.6B10-12 cm-2s-1, higher than the brightest bins of the previous sky map. M. Fornasa 7 Giugno 2007 Detection of IMBHs with ACTs Number of IMBHs over ACT sensitivity is 5.2 ± 3.1 for m =1 TeV M. Fornasa 7 Giugno 2007 Detection of IMBHs with GLAST • m =150 GeV and the energy threshold is 10 MeV • GLAST angular resolution is expected to be 3° (from 10 MeV to 500 MeV), 0.5° (from 500 MeV to 4 GeV) and 0.15° (above 4 GeV) • a selection is made and only high-energy photons (above 4 GeV) are considered • extragalactic background • hadronic and electronic backgrounds are absent • the effective area times the exposition time is roughly 8B109 cm2s • the resulting sensitivity for a 2 months period is 1.1B10-10cm-2s-1 M. Fornasa 7 Giugno 2007 Detection of IMBHs with GLAST Number of IMBHs over GLAST sensitivity is 17.1 ± 5.8 for m =150 GeV M. Fornasa 7 Giugno 2007 Detection of IMBHs with GLAST M. Fornasa 7 Giugno 2007 Conclusions • fluxes from DM annihilations in mini-halos around IMBHs that populate the Andromeda Galaxy have been computed • detection with an ACT is very challenging, due to the hadron background • the scenario with GLAST is more promising, even if the best angular resolution is achieved only after a strict selection (very high-energy photons) • the picture is that of isolated, point-like, bright sources in a region 3° wide around the Andromeda center M. Fornasa 7 Giugno 2007 Differential energy spectrum FPS (Fornengo-Pieri-Scopel) • MSSM is assumed and the DM candidate is a neutralino • focused only on the main channel (hadronization of b quarks) • fit from simulated data, using standard package as PYTHIA (x=E/m ) • differential spectrum for leptons hadronization is presented too (see later) (17) (a, b, c, d, e)=(-1.5, 0.37, -16.05, 18.01, -19.50) (a, b, c, d, e)=(-1.31, 6.94, -4.93, -0.51, -4.53) Kretzer Fragmentation Functions • DM candidate is again a neutralino • FF is the probability to have an hadron h with xQ2 from a parton p with Q2 M. Fornasa 7 Giugno 2007 Differential energy spectrum • focused on the photon production from a quarks b (i.e. p=b, h= 0) 0 resulting from (18) • a flat spectrum for photons from pions is assumed (19) BBEG (Bergstrom-Bringmann-Eriksson-Gustafsson) • differential spectrum is calculated for a DM candidate from Universal Extra-Dimension, what is called B(1) • contribution of primary photons from charged leptons is no longer neglected (B(1)B(1) l+l-) (20) M. Fornasa 7 Giugno 2007 Differential energy spectrum Flux from Andromeda FPS 1.33B10-14 cm-2s-1 Kretzer FFs 9.79B10-13 cm-2s-1 BBEG 1.60B10-14 cm-2s-1 From now on, only the FPS parametrization will be used M. Fornasa 7 Giugno 2007 Exclusion Plot • Solid line: all realizations with at least one detectable IMBH • Dashed line: 20 realizations over 200 with at least one detectable IMBH 3 v [cm s-1] 10-24 10-25 10-26 10-27 10% -28 10 10-29 0 M. Fornasa 200 400 600 800 1000 m [GeV] 7 Giugno 2007
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