Institute for Advanced Study Astrophysics Seminar
The Empirical Case For 10 GeV Dark Matter
ABSTRACT: I will summarize and discuss the body of evidence which has accumulated in
favor of dark matter in the form of approximately 10 GeV particles. This
evidence includes the spectrum and angular distribution of gamma rays from
the Galactic Center, the synchrotron emission from the Milky Way's radio
filaments, the diffuse synchrotron emission from the Inner Galaxy (the
"WMAP Haze") and low-energy signals from the direct detection experiments
DAMA/LIBRA, CoGeNT and CRESST-II. This collection of observations can be
explained by a relatively light dark matter particle with an annihilation
cross section consistent with that predicted for a simple thermal relic
(sigma v ~ 10^-26 cm^3/s) and with a distribution in the halo of the Milky
Way consistent with that predicted from simulations. Astrophysical
explanations for the gamma ray and synchrotron signals, in contrast, have
not been successful in accommodating these observations. Similarly, the
phase of the annual modulation observed by DAMA/LIBRA (and now supported by
CoGeNT) is inconsistent with all known or postulated modulating
backgrounds, but are in good agreement with expectations for dark matter
scattering. This scenario is consistent with all existing indirect and
collider constraints, as well as the constraints placed by CDMS.
Consistency with xenon-based experiments can be achieved if the response of
liquid xenon to very low-energy nuclear recoils is somewhat suppressed
relative to previous evaluations, or if the dark matter possesses different
couplings to protons and neutrons.
Date & Time
January 31, 2012 | 11:00am – 12:00pm
Location
Bloomberg Hall Astrophysics LibrarySpeakers
Dan Hooper
Affiliation
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory