Abstract

We analyze the Sun as a source for the indirect detection of dark matter through a search for gamma rays from the solar disk. Capture of dark matter by elastic interactions with the solar nuclei followed by annihilation to long-lived mediators can produce a detectable gamma-ray flux. We search three years of data from the High Altitude Water Cherenkov Observatory and find no statistically significant detection of TeV gamma-ray emission from the Sun. Using this, we constrain the spin-dependent elastic scattering cross section of dark matter with protons for dark matter masses above 1 TeV, assuming an unstable mediator with a favorable lifetime. The results complement constraints obtained from Fermi-LAT observations of the Sun and together cover WIMP masses between 4 GeV and $10^6$ GeV. The cross section constraints for mediator decays to gamma rays can be as strong as $\sim10^{-45}$ cm$^{-2}$, which is more than four orders of magnitude stronger than current direct-detection experiments for 1 TeV dark matter mass. The cross-section constraints at higher masses are even better, nearly 7 orders of magnitude better than the current direct-detection constraints for 100 TeV dark matter mass. This demonstration of sensitivity encourages detailed development of theoretical models in light of these powerful new constraints.

Highlights

  • A variety of astrophysical observations, including galaxy rotation curves, large-scale structure and cosmic microwave background (CMB) measurements, point towards the existence of nonbaryonic dark matter in the Universe [1,2,3,4,5,6,7]

  • The cross-section constraints for mediator decays to gamma rays can be as strong as ∼10−45 cm2, which is more than 4 orders of magnitude stronger than current direct-detection experiments for a 1 TeV dark matter mass

  • We briefly review the process of weakly interacting massive particle (WIMP) capture and annihilation in the Sun

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

A variety of astrophysical observations, including galaxy rotation curves, large-scale structure and cosmic microwave background (CMB) measurements, point towards the existence of nonbaryonic dark matter in the Universe [1,2,3,4,5,6,7]. The thermalized dark matter profile is peaked at the Sun’s core, with a very small annihilation rate outside the solar atmosphere [15,34,35,36] Such scenarios do not produce a high enough gamma-ray flux that could be probed with ground- or satellite-based detectors, as shown in Ref.

DARK MATTER IN THE SUN
SOLAR GAMMA-RAY OBSERVATIONS
HAWC search for TeV gamma rays
Fermi-LAT search for GeV gamma rays
Calculated dark matter signals
Limits on spin-dependent dark matter scattering
Findings
CONCLUSIONS
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