22–26 Jun 2026
Richard Roberts Auditorium
Europe/London timezone

A Solar Probe of Dark Matter Decay in the Galaxy

Not scheduled
20m
Richard Roberts Auditorium

Richard Roberts Auditorium

13 Brook Hill, Sheffield S3 7HF
Contributed Talk

Speaker

Maximilian Detering (King's College London)

Description

Dark matter (DM) decay in the Galactic halo injects energetic $e^\pm$ that can inverse-Compton scatter (ICS) solar photons into $\gamma$ rays, producing a diffuse halo of emission around the Sun. We present the first quantitative study of this signal as a probe of decaying DM. Using 15 years of Fermi-LAT solar-halo data, we compute the heliocentric ICS signal and derive limits on the DM lifetime for masses between 10 GeV and 10 TeV. For final states with the hardest spectra, we obtain constraints reaching lifetimes of $10^{27}\,\mathrm{s}$. Solar ICS $\gamma$-rays therefore provide a novel and complementary local probe of decaying DM, systematically distinct from both Galactic diffuse $\gamma$-ray searches and direct charged-particle measurements.

Authors

Maximilian Detering (King's College London) Mr Shyam Balaji (King's College London)

Presentation materials

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