17–21 nov. 2025
Tokyo
Fuseau horaire Asia/Tokyo

Dark Matter: the odds have changed

21 nov. 2025, 12:15
25m
Koshiba Hall (Tokyo)

Koshiba Hall

Tokyo

Hongo Campus, University of Tokyo

Orateur

Prof. Joe Silk (IAP)

Description

The strongest experimental evidence for dark matter is the Galactic Center gamma-ray excess observed by the Fermi telescope and even predicted prior to discovery as a potential dark matter signature via WIMP dark matter self-annihilations. However, an equally compelling explanation of the excess gamma-ray flux appeals to a population of old millisecond pulsars that also accounts for the observed boxy morphology inferred from the bulge old star population. We employ a set of Milky Way-like galaxies found in the Hestia constrained simulations of the local universe to explore the rich morphology of the central dark matter distribution, motivated by the GAIA discovery of a vigorous early merging history of the Milky Way galaxy. We predict a significantly non-spherical gamma-ray morphology from the WIMP interpretation. Future experiments, such as the Cherenkov Telescope Array, that extend to higher energies, should distinguish between the competing interpretations.

Auteur

Prof. Joe Silk (IAP)

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