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In a recent paper Brown et al. (2018) analyze the spectral properties of the globular cluster 47 Tucanae (47 Tuc) using 9 years of Fermi-LAT data. Brown et al. (2018) argue that the emission from 47 Tuc cannot be explained by millisecond pulsars (MSPs) alone because of a significant discrepancy between the MSP spectral properties and those of 47 Tuc. It is argued that there is a significant ($>5sigma$) preference for a two source scenario. The second component could be from the annihilation of dark matter in a density spike surrounding the intermediate-mass black hole candidate in 47 Tuc. In this paper we argue that the claimed discrepancy arises because Brown et al. (2017) use a stacked MSP spectrum to model the emission from MSPs in 47 Tuc which is insufficient to account for the uncertainties in the spectrum of the MSPs in 47 Tuc. Contrary to the claims by Brown et al. (2018), we show that the significance of an additional dark matter component is $lesssim 2sigma$ when sample variance in the spectrum of a population of MSPs is accounted for. The spectrum of 47 Tuc is compatible with that of a population of MSPs similar to the disk population.
47 Tuc was the first globular cluster observed to be $gamma$-ray bright, with the $gamma$-rays being attributed to a population of unresolved millisecond pulsars (MSPs). Recent kinematic data, combined with detailed simulations, appears to be consist
Spectroscopy has shown the presence of the CN band dicothomy and the Na-O anticorrelations for 50--70% of the investigated samples in the cluster 47 Tuc, otherwise considered a normal prototype of high metallicity clusters from the photometric analys
Using the data from the Large Area Telescope on board the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope, we have searched for the gamma-ray pulsations from the direction of globular cluster M28 (NGC 6626). We report the discovery of a signal with the frequency con
We offer a standing wave explanation for the rising proper motions of stars at the center of the globular cluster 47-Tucanae, amounting to $simeq 0.44%$ of the total mass. We show this can be explained as a solitonic core of dark matter composed of l
Recently, gamma-ray emission in the direction of Coma, with a TS value of $sim 40$, has been reported. In this work we will discuss the possibility of such a residual emission coming from dark matter annihilation. Our results show that the gamma-ray