Constraints on dark matter annihilation from a nearby subhalo candidate

Abstract

A recent analysis of pulsar timing data has reported evidence for a massive ( 6 × 107 M) dark matter subhalo located only 0.8 kpc from Earth. This candidate implies an exceptionally large J-factor of 1023\, GeV2\,cm-5, exceeding that of known classical dwarf spheroidal galaxies by orders of magnitude and rivaling the Galactic Center. In this work, we utilize more than 17 years of Fermi-LAT data to search for gamma-ray emission from this subhalo. We identify a tentative excess in the region with ambiguous origin. Adopting a conservative strategy, we retain this excess without modeling additional astrophysical components, treating it instead as unmodeled background to derive upper limits on the dark matter annihilation cross-section for the bb and τ+τ- channels. Despite this conservative treatment, the resulting limits remain stringent due to the exceptionally large J-factor. Subject to the dynamical confirmation of the subhalo, these constraints are potentially orders of magnitude stronger than those obtained from combined analyses of dwarf spheroidal galaxies and blind subhalo searches.

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