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Probing Dark Matter With Radio Observations. C horng-Yuan Hwang 黃崇源. Why do we need Dark Matter (DM)?. Rotation curve of Milky Way and galaxies Mass of galaxy clusters Large scale structures of the Universe Cosmological model
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Probing Dark Matter With Radio Observations Chorng-Yuan Hwang 黃崇源
Why do we need Dark Matter (DM)? • Rotation curve of Milky Way and galaxies • Mass of galaxy clusters • Large scale structures of the Universe • Cosmological model • Modified Newtonian Dynamics (MOND) might explain rotation curves but not large scale structures and CMB
Dark matter in galaxy • About 90% of the mass of galaxies is in the form of dark matter, which can not be observed. • The flat rotation curve of the Milky Way suggests that the dark halo of the Milky might distribute: • Total M r • (r) r-2
Other Models/Theories • Modified Newtonian Dynamics (MOND) • This might explain the rotation curves of galaxies but is difficult to explain the large scale structures and CMB • It is not excluded that both dark matter and MOND are necessary.
Dark Matter Distribution • N-body simulation of dark matter halo structure: • NFW profile: • Cusp profile (Diemand 2007):
What is the Dark Matter (DM)? • DM must be non-baryonic • DM must be cold • A viable candidate for the DM is the Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (WIMPs). • The most favorable WIMPs are the neutralino predicated in the supersymmetric (SUSY) extension of the standard model and Kaluza-Klein particles.
Neutralino • A linear combination of two neutral higgsinos and two gauginos. = B + W + H1 + H2 • The most likely mass of is between ~ 50 GeV to 1 TeV • Self-annihilation of will decay into fermion pairs or gauge boson pairs and will finally become gamma ray, electrons and positrons.
Kaluza-Klein particles • Particles from compact extra dimension. • the mass of the lightest Kaluza–Klein particle is expected to be greater than 300 GeV • The annihilation of Kaluza–Klein particles can proceed through direct production of electron-positron pairs resulting in a source spectrum that is dominated by a delta function at the particle mass.
Prediction and Observations of DM: Difficult to detect directly
Relativistic electrons positrons decayed from DM • If is the relic particle from the hot big bang and constitute the DM, then the self-annihilating cross section is related to the abundance of dark matter • mh2 =h2 = 310-27 cm2 s-1/<v> • From WMAP, mh2 =0.127, so the self-annihilation cross section of is about <v> = 2.36 10-26 cm2 s-1 • We might observe the resulting electrons and -rays that can be compared with models!
Where to Observe the DM • Simulations suggest that DM is clumped into sub-halos down to the Earth mass with a size of the solar system. • DM mass in clumps ~ 50% of total mass in halos • dN/dM ~ M-2 • The source function is proportional to n2 • Even small DM sub-halos can produce significant relativistic electrons and -rays!
Missing Subhalos? Diemand et al 2007
Electron/positron spectra Source function: Evolution of electrons: Stationary spectra:
Equilibrium positron spectra in Milky Way from the annihilation of 100GeV using clumpy model of Diemand et al 2005
Equilibrium positron spectra in Milky Way from the annihilation of 1TeV using clumpy model of Diemand et al 2005
Kaluza-Klein particles with mass of 620 GeV? (Chang et al 2008; ATIC)
Radio emission of electrons and positrons from decayed DM • Most of the astronomical objects have magnetic fields. • Relativistic electrons in magnetic fields can produce radio emission. • We can estimate the resulting radio emission and compare with radio observations of galaxies and galaxy clusters.
Radio Halos • Some clusters show radio halos from synchrotron radiation of relativistic electrons of unknown origins. • large scale and steep spectrum. • 1/3 of clusters with mass > 1015 solar mass show radio halos • Magnetic fields in all clusters are ~ 5-10G
A2163 Feretti (2003)
Models for Emission of DM Halo from Nearby galaxy Clusters and galaxies • Select several nearby rich clusters with measured X-ray profile and mass • Assume B=5 G and steady state • NFW profile • <v> = 2.36 10-26 cm2 s-1 • n = mass density/m • m =100GeV – several TeV • subhalo mass: ~ 1012-10-4 M
Source functionsof Coma main halo for 2TeV , solid line for fermion channels and dashed line for boson channels
Source functionsof Coma halo for 100GeV , solid line for fermion channels and dashed line for boson channels
Conclusion and Summary • The predicted radio halo emission from the self-annihilation of DM neutralinos could be detectable. • The non-detection of radio halos for some massive clusters with high magnetic fields might be used to constrain the properties of the DM neutralinos or/and to constrain the structure formation models of the universe.