Combined IceCube and ANTARES data show a low-energy neutrino excess whose sky distribution is compared to expectations from dark matter annihilation or decay.
Dark Matter interpretation of low energy IceCube MESE excess
1 Pith paper cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
The 2-years MESE IceCube events show a slightly excess in the energy range 10-100 TeV with a maximum local statistical significance of 2.3$\sigma$, once a hard astrophysical power-law is assumed. A spectral index smaller than 2.2 is indeed suggested by multi-messenger studies related to $p$-$p$ sources and by the recent IceCube analysis regarding 6-years up-going muon neutrinos. In the present paper, we propose a two-components scenario where the extraterrestrial neutrinos are explained in terms of an astrophysical power-law and a Dark Matter signal. We consider both decaying and annihilating Dark Matter candidates with different final states (quarks and leptons) and different halo density profiles. We perform a likelihood-ratio analysis that provides a statistical significance up to 3.9$\sigma$ for a Dark Matter interpretation of the IceCube low energy excess.
fields
hep-ph 1years
2019 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
citing papers explorer
-
Potential Dark Matter Signals at Neutrino Telescopes
Combined IceCube and ANTARES data show a low-energy neutrino excess whose sky distribution is compared to expectations from dark matter annihilation or decay.