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There have been several reports of a detection of an unexplained excess of X-ray emission at $simeq$ 3.5 keV in astrophysical systems. One interpretation of this excess is the decay of sterile neutrino dark matter. The most influential study to date analysed 73 clusters observed by the XMM-Newton satellite. We explore evidence for a $simeq$ 3.5 keV excess in the XMM-PN spectra of 117 redMaPPer galaxy clusters ($0.1 < z < 0.6$). In our analysis of individual spectra, we identify three systems with an excess of flux at $simeq$ 3.5 keV. In one case (XCS J0003.3+0204) this excess may result from a discrete emission line. None of these systems are the most dark matter dominated in our sample. We group the remaining 114 clusters into four temperature ($T_{rm X}$) bins to search for an increase in $simeq$ 3.5 keV flux excess with $T_{rm X}$ - a reliable tracer of halo mass. However, we do not find evidence of a significant excess in flux at $simeq$ 3.5 keV in any $T_{rm X}$ bins. To maximise sensitivity to a potentially weak dark matter decay feature at $simeq$ 3.5 keV, we jointly fit 114 clusters. Again, no significant excess is found at $simeq$ 3.5 keV. We estimate the upper limit of an undetected emission line at $simeq$ 3.5 keV to be $2.41 times 10^{-6}$ photons cm$^{-2}$ s$^{-1}$, corresponding to a mixing angle of $sin^2(2theta)=4.4 times 10^{-11}$, lower than previous estimates from cluster studies. We conclude that a flux excess at $simeq$ 3.5 keV is not a ubiquitous feature in clusters and therefore unlikely to originate from sterile neutrino dark matter decay.
I show that model dependencies in the analysis by Dessert, Rodd & Safdi (2020) relax their claimed constraint by a factor of ~20. After including conservative model choices, the derived limits are comparable to or slightly better than limits from pre
Context. Recent findings of line emission at 3.5 keV in both individual and stacked X-ray spectra of galaxy clusters have been speculated to have dark matter origin. Aims. If the origin is indeed dark matter, the emission line is expected to be detec
The XMM-Newton Slew Survey (XSS) covers a significant fraction of the sky in a broad X-ray bandpass. Although shallow by contemporary standards, in the `classical 2-10 keV band of X-ray astronomy, the XSS provides significantly better sensitivity tha
We present a comprehensive search for the 3.5 keV line, using $sim$51 Ms of archival Chandra observations peering through the Milky Ways Dark Matter Halo from across the entirety of the sky, gathered via the Chandra Source Catalog Release 2.0. We con
Warm dark matter (WDM) means DM particles with mass m in the keV scale. For large scales, (structures beyond ~ 100 kpc) WDM and CDM yield identical results which agree with observations. For intermediate scales, WDM gives the correct abundance of sub