New SBF distance data confirm a steradian-scale flow converging at ~70 Mpc that matches the direction and amplitude of the CMB dipole and the original Great Attractor model.
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4 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
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2026 4representative citing papers
The authors produce a new all-sky Galactic emission model with synchrotron amplitude at 4.76 GHz roughly twice the Planck 2015 value, derived via Commander fitting to recent radio and microwave surveys.
Comparison of Galactic magnetic field models to polarized synchrotron observations shows good agreement on angles but poor match on intensity, indicating local foreground structures must be incorporated.
This review summarizes evidence for anomalous microwave emission and projects how SKA observations will identify its carriers and mechanisms in Galactic and extragalactic environments.
citing papers explorer
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Return to the Great Attractor: Strong Evidence for a Steradian-sized Flow Converging at $\sim$70 Mpc within the GA Supercluster and Aligned with the CMB Dipole
New SBF distance data confirm a steradian-scale flow converging at ~70 Mpc that matches the direction and amplitude of the CMB dipole and the original Great Attractor model.
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All-sky modeling of Galactic emission at radio and microwave frequencies
The authors produce a new all-sky Galactic emission model with synchrotron amplitude at 4.76 GHz roughly twice the Planck 2015 value, derived via Commander fitting to recent radio and microwave surveys.
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A comparison between Galactic magnetic field models and polarized synchrotron emission with C-BASS at 4.76 GHz and S-PASS at 2.3 GHz
Comparison of Galactic magnetic field models to polarized synchrotron observations shows good agreement on angles but poor match on intensity, indicating local foreground structures must be incorporated.
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Probing Anomalous Microwave Emission with the Square Kilometre Array
This review summarizes evidence for anomalous microwave emission and projects how SKA observations will identify its carriers and mechanisms in Galactic and extragalactic environments.