Publication | Open Access
Indication of Gamma-Ray Emission from the Newly Discovered Dwarf Galaxy Reticulum II
145
Citations
59
References
2015
Year
EngineeringObservational PhysicsTerrestrial Gamma-ray Flashesγ-Ray EmissionReticulum IiLarge Scale StructureGalaxy FormationPhysicsGamma-ray EmissionDark Matter SearchCosmic RaySynchrotron RadiationKnown Dwarf GalaxyHigh-energy AstrophysicsCosmic AbundanceExperimental Nuclear PhysicsAstrophysical PlasmaHigh-energy Cosmic RayDark Matter
We present a search for γ-ray emission from the direction of the newly discovered dwarf galaxy Reticulum II. Using Fermi-LAT Collaboration data, we detect a signal that exceeds expected backgrounds between ∼2-10 GeV and is consistent with annihilation of dark matter for particle masses less than a few ×10^{2} GeV. Modeling the background as a Poisson process based on Fermi-LAT diffuse models, and taking into account trial factors, we detect emission with p value less than 9.8×10^{-5} (>3.7σ). An alternative, model-independent treatment of the background reduces the significance, raising the p value to 9.7×10^{-3} (2.3σ). Even in this case, however, Reticulum II has the most significant γ-ray signal of any known dwarf galaxy. If Reticulum II has a dark-matter halo that is similar to those inferred for other nearby dwarfs, the signal is consistent with the s-wave relic abundance cross section for annihilation.
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