ESA has just done the first big press release for the Integral gamma-ray telescope, and the big woosh you're hearing is the sound of numerous dark matter models flushing down the toilet. For several years the community has been carefully eyeing an extended, apparently spherical excess of gamma-rays from the center of the galaxy. Theorists have been busy generating crafty models where the excess in gamma-rays comes from the direct annhilation of dark matter particles, or from a decay chain from the dark matter particles themselves. These models were attractive because the shape and extent of the gamma-ray detection was wrong for just about any Galactic source except for the dark matter halo itself. The dark matter halo would produce just the right sort of signal, since it's presumably highly cuspy in the center, leading to high rates of the sorts of interactions which might lead to detectable photons, but ...
Dark Matter: Still Dark.
The new gamma-ray telescope reveals a disk-like distribution of gamma-rays, challenging existing dark matter models.
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