Hopes dim that gamma rays can reveal dark matter
The distribution of stars in the Milky Way points to a more mundane source of the excess light
An astronomical calling card, tentatively attributed to mysterious dark matter, seems likely to be due to a more mundane source.
An unexplained glow of high-energy light from the center of the Milky Way, first spotted in 2009, raised scientists’ hopes of better pinning down dark matter (SN: 11/20/10, p. 11). That unidentified substance has been detected so far only via its gravitational tug on other matter.
Physicists thought that this excess of energetic light known as gamma rays might be released by the annihilation of particles of dark matter that mill about the galaxy’s core (SN: 5/17/14, p. 8). But an analysis published August 6 in Nature Astronomy suggests that the light isn’t from dark matter after all. Instead, the gamma rays might be spit out by other galactic denizens, such as spinning dead stars called pulsars that are known to produce the light.