6–8 May 2019
University of Pittsburgh
US/Eastern timezone

Estimating the local dark matter content using Gaia DR2

7 May 2019, 14:15
15m
205 (Lawrence Hall)

205

Lawrence Hall

parallel talk DM III

Speaker

Jatan Buch (IPhT, CEA Saclay)

Description

The dark matter (DM) content in the local solar neighborhood is an important ingredient for direct detection experiments on Earth such as LZ, Xenon, PandaX, and searches for DM in charged cosmic ray data from PAMELA, AMS-02, DAMPE, and CALET. Traditionally, the local DM density has been estimated by analyzing the vertical motion of different ‘tracer’ stars in the solar neighborhood. These methods rely on an accurate reconstruction of the galactic potential by modeling baryonic matter as disks with different scale heights and normalizations, and approximating the collisionless DM halo by a constant DM density close to the galactic plane. However, dissipative interactions in, even a fraction of, the dark sector could lead to the formation of a thin dark disk, parametrized by its surface density and scale height, co-rotating with the baryonic disk. In this talk, we present constraints on thin dark disk parameters using the 6D phase space information of stars from the latest Gaia data release (DR2). We also determine a value of local DM density (in absence of a thin dark disk) that is consistent with those from complementary methods in the literature.

Author

Jatan Buch (Brown University)

Co-authors

Shing Chau Leung (Brown University) JiJi Fan (Brown University)

Presentation materials