Small-scale clumps in the galactic halo and dark matter annihilation

Abstract

Production of small-scale DM clumps is studied in the standard cosmological scenario with an inflation-produced primeval fluctuation spectrum. Special attention is given to three following problems: (i) The mass spectrum of small-scale clumps with M 103 M is calculated with tidal destruction of the clumps taken into account within the hierarchical model of clump structure. Only 0.1 - 0.5% of small clumps survive the stage of tidal destruction in each logarithmic mass interval M1. (ii) The mass distribution of clumps has a cutoff at M min due to diffusion of DM particles out of a fluctuation and free streaming at later stage. M min is a model dependent quantity. In the case the neutralino, considered as a pure bino, is a DM particle, M min 10-8 M. (iii) The evolution of density profile in a DM clump does not result in the singularity because of formation of the core under influence of tidal interaction. The radius of the core is Rc 0.1 R, where R is radius of the clump. The applications for annihilation of DM particles in the Galactic halo are studied. The number density of clumps as a function of their mass, radius and distance to the Galactic center is presented. The enhancement of annihilation signal due to clumpiness, valid for arbitrary DM particles, is calculated. In spite of small survival probability, the annihilation signal in most cases is dominated by clumps. For observationally preferable value of index or primeval fluctuation spectrum np ≈ 1, the enhancement of annihilation signal is described by factor 2 - 5 for different density profiles in a clump.

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