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The Large High Altitude Air Shower Observatory (LHAASO) is a next-generation observatory for high energy gamma rays and cosmic rays with wide field of view. It will detect gamma rays with high sensitivity in the energy range from 300 GeV to 1 PeV. Therefore, it is promising for LHAASO to search for the high-energy gamma rays induced by dark matter (DM) self-annihilation in dwarf spheroidal satellite galaxies (dSphs), which are ideal objects for the DM indirect detection. In this work, we investigate the LHAASO sensitivity to DM self-annihilation signatures for 19 dSphs and take the uncertainties on the spatial DM distribution of dSphs into account. We perform a joint likelihood analysis for the 19 dSphs and find that the LHAASO sensitivity to the DM annihilation cross section will reach $mathcal{O}(10^{-24})sim mathcal{O}(10^{-25})$ cm$^3$ s$^{-1}$ at the mass scale above TeV for several annihilation modes, which is larger than the canonical thermal relic cross section by a factor of 10 to 100.
As a next-generation complex extensive air shower array with a large field of view, the large high altitude air shower observatory (LHAASO) is very sensitive to the very high energy gamma-rays from $sim$ 300 GeV to 1 PeV, and may thus serve as an imp
Dwarf spheroidal galaxies of the Local Group are close satellites of the Milky Way characterized by a large mass-to-light ratio and are not expected to be the site of non-thermal high-energy gamma-ray emission or intense star formation. Therefore the
Mass models for a sample of 18 late-type dwarf and low surface brightness galaxies show that in almost all cases the contribution of the stellar disks to the rotation curves can be scaled to explain most of the observed rotation curves out to two or
Dwarf galaxies represent a powerful probe of annihilating dark matter particle models, with gamma-ray data setting some of the best bounds available. A major issue in improving over existing constraints consists in the limited knowledge of the astrop
We present an updated analysis of the gamma-ray flux from the directions of classical dwarf spheroidal galaxies, deriving new constraints on WIMP dark matter (DM) annihilation using a decade of Fermi-LAT data. Among the major novelties, we infer the