4.6 Article

Where do the 3.5 keV photons come from? A morphological study of the Galactic Center and of Perseus

Journal

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1475-7516/2015/02/009

Keywords

dark matter theory; dark matter experiments; galaxy clusters; X-ray telescopes

Funding

  1. NASA Graduate Research Fellowship under NASA NESSF Grant [NNX13AO63H]
  2. US Department of Energy [DE-SC0010107-001]

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We test the origin of the 3.5 keV line photons by analyzing the morphology of the emission at that energy from the Galactic Center and from the Perseus cluster of galaxies. We employ a variety of different templates to model the continuum emission and analyze the resulting radial and azimuthal distribution of the residual emission. We then perform a pixel-by-pixel binned likelihood analysis including line emission templates and dark matter templates and assess the correlation of the 3.5 keV emission with these templates. We conclude that the radial and azimuthal distribution of the residual emission is incompatible with a dark matter origin for both the Galactic center and Perseus; the Galactic center 3.5 keV line photons trace the morphology of lines at comparable energy, while the Perseus 3.5 keV photons are highly correlated with the cluster's cool core, and exhibit a morphology incompatible with dark matter decay. The template analysis additionally allows us to set the most stringent constraints to date on lines in the 3.5 keV range from dark matter decay.

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