4.7 Article

Indirect dark matter searches at ultrahigh energy neutrino detectors

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW D
Volume 104, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevD.104.083002

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Neil Gehrels Prize Postdoctoral Fellowship
  2. U.S. National Science Foundation [PHY-2112527]
  3. U.S. Department of Energy [DE-SC-0010113]
  4. NASA Probe Mission Concept Study award [16APROBES16-0023, NNX17AJ82G]
  5. NASA at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County under NASA/GSFC [80NSSC19K0626, 17-APRA17-0066]

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The study demonstrates that next-generation high-energy neutrino detectors such as POEMMA and GRAND have unique advantages for probing dark matter properties, improving sensitivity and comparing with existing constraints. Additionally, the uncertainties related to dark matter distribution in the galactic halo play an important role in the research outcomes.
High to ultrahigh energy neutrino detectors can uniquely probe the properties of dark matter chi by searching for the secondary neutrinos produced through annihilation and/or decay processes. We evaluate the sensitivities to dark matter thermally averaged annihilation cross section and partial decay width Gamma(chi ->nu(nu) over bar) (in the mass scale 10(7) <= m(chi)/GeV <= 10(15)) for next generation observatories like POEMMA (Probe of Extreme Multi-Messenger Astrophysics) and GRAND (Giant Radio Array for Neutrino Detection). We show that in the range 10(7) <= m(chi)/GeV <= 10(11), space-based Cherenkov detectors like POEMMA have the advantage of full-sky coverage and rapid stewing, enabling an optimized dark matter observation strategy focusing on the Galactic Center. We also show that ground-based radio detectors such as GRAND can achieve high sensitivities and high duty cycles in radio quiet areas. We compare the sensitivities of next generation neutrino experiments with existing constraints from IceCube and updated 90% C.L. upper limits on and Gamma(chi ->nu(nu) over bar) using results from the Pierre Auger Collaboration and Antarctic Impulsive Transient Antenna. We show that in the range 10(7) <= m(V)/GeV <= 10(11), POEMMA and GRAND10k will improve the neutrino sensitivity to particle dark matter by factors of 2 to 10 over existing limits, whereas GRAND200k will improve this sensitivity by 2 orders of magnitude. In the range 10(11) <= m(chi)/GeV <= 10(15), POEMMA's fluorescence observation mode will achieve an unprecedented sensitivity to dark matter properties. Finally, we highlight the importance of the uncertainties related to the dark matter distribution in the galactic halo, using the latest fit and estimates of the galactic parameters.

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