Neutralinos and the Origin of Radio Halos in Clusters of Galaxies

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics

Scientific paper

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49 pages, 11 Figures, Latex (using epsfig), submitted to The Astrophysical Journal. submitted to The Astrophysical Journal

Scientific paper

10.1086/323427

We assume that the supersymmetric lightest neutralino is a good candidate for the CDM and explore the possibility to produce diffuse radio emission from high-energy electrons arising from the neutralino annihilation in galaxy clusters whose intracluster medium is filled with a large-scale magnetic field. We show that these electrons fit the population of seed relativistic electrons postulated in many models for the origin of cluster radio halos. For magnetic fields with central values $3 \div 30$ $\mu$G (depending on the DM profile), the population of seed relativistic electrons from neutralino annihilation can fit the radio halo spectra of Coma and 1E0657-56. The shape and the frequency extension of the radio halo spectra are connected with the mass and physical composition of the neutralino. A pure-gaugino neutralino with mass $M_{\chi} \geq 80$ GeV can reasonably fit the spectra of both Coma and 1E0657-56. This model provides a number of extra predictions that make it definitely testable. On the one hand, it agrees with the observations that {\it (i)} the radio halo is centered on the cluster dynamical center, usually coincident with the X-ray center, {\it (ii)} the radio halo surface brightness is similar to the X-ray one, and {\it (iii)} the monochromatic radio luminosity at 1.4 GHz correlates strongly with the IC gas temperature. On the other hand, the model predicts that radio halos should be present in every cluster, which is not actually observed, although the predicted radio halo luminosities can change by a large amount ($\sim 10^2 \div 10^6$), depending on the amplitude and the structure of the IC magnetic field. Also, neutral pions arising from neutralino annihilation should give rise to substantial gamma-ray emission that could be tested by the next generation gamma-ray experiments.

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