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      Constraints on dark matter annihilations from diffuse gamma-ray emission in the Galaxy

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          Abstract

          Recent advances in gamma-ray cosmic ray, infrared and radio astronomy have allowed us to develop a significantly better understanding of the galactic medium properties in the last few years. In this work using the DRAGON code, that numerically solves the CR propagation equation and calculating gamma-ray emissivities in a 2-dimensional grid enclosing the Galaxy, we study in a self consistent manner models for the galactic diffuse gamma-ray emission. Our models are cross-checked to both the available CR and gamma-ray data. We address the extend to which dark matter annihilations in the Galaxy can contribute to the diffuse gamma-ray flux towards different directions on the sky. Moreover we discuss the impact that astrophysical uncertainties of non DM nature, have on the derived gamma-ray limits. Such uncertainties are related to the diffusion properties on the Galaxy, the interstellar gas and the interstellar radiation field energy densities. Light ~10 GeV dark matter annihilating dominantly to hadrons is more strongly constrained by gamma-ray observations towards the inner parts of the Galaxy and influenced the most by assumptions of the gas distribution; while TeV scale DM annihilating dominantly to leptons has its tightest constraints from observations towards the galactic center avoiding the galactic disk plane, with the main astrophysical uncertainty being the radiation field energy density. In addition, we present a method of deriving constraints on the dark matter distribution profile from the diffuse gamma-ray spectra. These results critically depend on the assumed mass of the dark matter particles and the type of its end annihilation products.

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          Dark Matter and Pulsar Origins of the Rising Cosmic Ray Positron Fraction in Light of New Data From AMS

          The rise of the cosmic ray positron fraction with energy, as first observed with high confidence by PAMELA, implies that a large flux of high energy positrons has been recently (or is being currently) injected into the local volume of the Milky Way. With the new and much more precise measurement of the positron fraction recently provided by AMS, we revisit the question of the origin of these high energy positrons. We find that while some dark matter models (annihilating directly to electrons or muons) no longer appear to be capable of accommodating these data, other models in which ~1-3 TeV dark matter particles annihilate to unstable intermediate states could still be responsible for the observed signal. Nearby pulsars also remain capable of explaining the observed positron fraction. Future measurements of the positron fraction by AMS (using a larger data set), combined with their anticipated measurements of various cosmic ray secondary-to-primary ratios, may enable us to further discriminate between these remaining scenarios.
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            Successive Measurements of Cosmic-Ray Antiproton Spectrum in a Positive Phase of the Solar Cycle

            The energy spectrum of cosmic-ray antiprotons has been measured by BESS successively in 1993, 1995, 1997 and 1998. In total, 848 antiprotons were clearly identified in energy range 0.18 to 4.20 GeV. From these successive measurements of the antiproton spectrum at various solar activity, we discuss about the effect of the solar modulation and the origin of cosmic-ray antiprotons. Measured antiproton ratios were nearly identical during this period, and were consistent with a prediction taking the charge dependent solar modulation into account.
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              Author and article information

              Journal
              19 August 2013
              2014-03-04
              Article
              10.1088/1475-7516/2014/01/017
              1308.4135
              38e70ea6-cbe7-45a3-8f1c-42f286a61242

              http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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              Custom metadata
              FERMILAB-PUB-13-320-A
              JCAP 1401 (2014) 017
              34 pages, 11 figures, 3 appendices; v2 in agreement with JCAP published version, small revisions in text, results and conclusions unchanged
              astro-ph.HE astro-ph.GA hep-ph

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