Back to Search Start Over

Testing the dark matter subhalo hypothesis of the gamma-ray source 3FGL J2212.5+0703

Authors :
Wang, Yuan-Peng
Duan, Kai-Kai
Ma, Peng-Xiong
Liang, Yun-Feng
Shen, Zhao-Qiang
Li, Shang
Yue, Chuan
Yuan, Qiang
Zang, Jing-Jing
Fan, Yi-Zhong
Chang, Jin
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

N-body simulations predict that galaxies at the Milky Way scale host a large number of dark matter (DM) subhalos. Some of these subhalos, if they are massive enough or close enough to the Earth, might be detectable in $\gamma$ rays due to the DM annihilation. 3FGL J2212.5+0703, an unidentified gamma-ray source, has been suggested to be the counterpart candidate of a DM subhalo by Bertoni et al. (2015, 2016). In this work we analyze the Fermi-LAT Pass 8 data of 3FGL J2212.5+0703 to independently test the DM subhalo hypothesis of this source. In order to suppress the possible contamination from two nearby very-bright blazars, we just take into account the front-converting gamma-rays which have better angular resolutions than that of the back-converting photons. In addition to the spatial distribution analysis, we have extended the spectrum analysis down to the energies of $\sim 100$ MeV, and thoroughly examined the variability of the emission during the past 8 years. We confirm that 3FGL J2212.5+0703 is a steady and spatially-extended gamma-ray emitter at a high confidence level. The spectrum is well consistent with that expected from DM annihilation into $b\bar{b}$. The introduction of a phenomenological LogParabola spectrum just improves the fit slightly. All these results suggest that 3FGL J2212.5+0703 could be indicative of a DM subhalo.<br />Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in PRD

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1611.05135
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.94.123002