Gamma-ray line signatures can be expected in the very-high-energy (πΈπΎ >100ββGeV) domain due to self-annihilation or decay of dark matter (DM) particles in space. Such a signal would be readily distinguishable from astrophysical πΎ-ray sources that in most cases produce continuous spectra that span over several orders of magnitude in energy. Using data collected with the H.E.S.S. πΎ-ray instrument, upper limits on linelike emission are obtained in the energy range between βΌ500ββGeV and βΌ25ββTeV for the central part of the Milky Way halo and for extragalactic observations, complementing recent limits obtained with the Fermi-LAT instrument at lower energies. No statistically significant signal could be found. For monochromatic πΎ-ray line emission, flux limits of (2 Γ10β7β2 Γ10β5)ββmβ2βsβ1βsrβ1 and (1 Γ10β8β2 Γ10β6)ββmβ2βsβ1βsrβ1 are obtained for the central part of the Milky Way halo and extragalactic observations, respectively. For a DM particle mass of 1 TeV, limits on the velocity-averaged DM annihilation cross section β¨πβ’π£β©πβ’πβπΎβ’πΎ reach βΌ10β27ββcm3βsβ1, based on the Einasto parametrization of the Galactic DM halo density profile.

