Extragalactic dark matter and direct detection experiments

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Abstract

Recent astronomical data strongly suggest that a significant part of the dark matter content of the Local Group and Virgo Supercluster is not incorporated into the galaxy halos and forms diffuse components of these galaxy clusters. A portion of the particles from these components may penetrate the Milky Way and make an extragalactic contribution to the total dark matter containment of our Galaxy. We find that the particles of the diffuse component of the Local Group are apt to contribute ∼12% to the total dark matter density near Earth. The particles of the extragalactic dark matter stand out because of their high speed (∼600 km s-1), i.e., they are much faster than the galactic dark matter. In addition, their speed distribution is very narrow (∼20 km s-1). The particles have an isotropic velocity distribution (perhaps, in contrast to the galactic dark matter). The extragalactic dark matter should provide a significant contribution to the direct detection signal. If the detector is sensitive only to the fast particles (v > 450 km s-1), then the signal may even dominate. The density of other possible types of the extragalactic dark matter (for instance, of the diffuse component of the Virgo Supercluster) should be relatively small and comparable with the average dark matter density of the universe. However, these particles can generate anomaly high-energy collisions in direct dark matter detectors. © 2013. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

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APA

Baushev, A. N. (2013). Extragalactic dark matter and direct detection experiments. Astrophysical Journal, 771(2). https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/771/2/117

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