pith. machine review for the scientific record. sign in

arxiv: 1410.3696 · v1 · submitted 2014-10-14 · 🌌 astro-ph.HE

Recognition: unknown

The spectrum of isotropic diffuse gamma-ray emission between 100 MeV and 820 GeV

The Fermi LAT Collaboration: M. Ackermann , M. Ajello , A. Albert , W. B. Atwood , L. Baldini , J. Ballet , G. Barbiellini , D. Bastieri
show 136 more authors
K. Bechtol R. Bellazzini E. Bissaldi R. D. Blandford E. D. Bloom E. Bottacini T. J. Brandt J. Bregeon P. Bruel R. Buehler S. Buson G. A. Caliandro R. A. Cameron M. Caragiulo P. A. Caraveo E. Cavazzuti C. Cecchi E. Charles A. Chekhtman J. Chiang G. Chiaro S. Ciprini R. Claus J. Cohen-Tanugi J. Conrad A. Cuoco S. Cutini F. D'Ammando A. De Angelis F. de Palma C. D. Dermer S. W. Digel E. do Couto e Silva P. S. Drell C. Favuzzi E. C. Ferrara W. B. Focke A. Franckowiak Y. Fukazawa S. Funk P. Fusco F. Gargano D. Gasparrini S. Germani N. Giglietto P. Giommi F. Giordano M. Giroletti G. Godfrey G. A. Gomez-Vargas I. A. Grenier S. Guiriec M. Gustafsson D. Hadasch K. Hayashi E. Hays J.W. Hewitt P. Ippoliti T. Jogler G. J\'ohannesson A. S. Johnson W. N. Johnson T. Kamae J. Kataoka J. Kn\"odlseder M. Kuss S. Larsson L. Latronico J. Li L. Li F. Longo F. Loparco B. Lott M. N. Lovellette P. Lubrano G. M. Madejski A. Manfreda F. Massaro M. Mayer M. N. Mazziotta J. E. McEnery P. F. Michelson W. Mitthumsiri T. Mizuno A. A. Moiseev M. E. Monzani A. Morselli I. V. Moskalenko S. Murgia R. Nemmen E. Nuss T. Ohsugi N. Omodei E. Orlando J. F. Ormes D. Paneque J. H. Panetta J. S. Perkins M. Pesce-Rollins F. Piron G. Pivato T. A. Porter S. Rain\`o R. Rando M. Razzano S. Razzaque A. Reimer O. Reimer T. Reposeur S. Ritz R. W. Romani M. S\'anchez-Conde M. Schaal A. Schulz C. Sgr\`o E. J. Siskind G. Spandre P. Spinelli A. W. Strong D. J. Suson H. Takahashi J. G. Thayer J. B. Thayer L. Tibaldo M. Tinivella D. F. Torres G. Tosti E. Troja Y. Uchiyama G. Vianello M. Werner B. L. Winer K. S. Wood M. Wood G. Zaharijas S. Zimmer
Authors on Pith no claims yet
classification 🌌 astro-ph.HE
keywords diffuseigrbemissiongalacticenergyisotropicattributedcutoff
0
0 comments X
read the original abstract

The {\gamma}-ray sky can be decomposed into individually detected sources, diffuse emission attributed to the interactions of Galactic cosmic rays with gas and radiation fields, and a residual all-sky emission component commonly called the isotropic diffuse {\gamma}-ray background (IGRB). The IGRB comprises all extragalactic emissions too faint or too diffuse to be resolved in a given survey, as well as any residual Galactic foregrounds that are approximately isotropic. The first IGRB measurement with the Large Area Telescope (LAT) on board the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope (Fermi) used 10 months of sky-survey data and considered an energy range between 200 MeV and 100 GeV. Improvements in event selection and characterization of cosmic-ray backgrounds, better understanding of the diffuse Galactic emission, and a longer data accumulation of 50 months, allow for a refinement and extension of the IGRB measurement with the LAT, now covering the energy range from 100 MeV to 820 GeV. The IGRB spectrum shows a significant high-energy cutoff feature, and can be well described over nearly four decades in energy by a power law with exponential cutoff having a spectral index of $2.32\pm0.02$ and a break energy of $(279\pm52)$ GeV using our baseline diffuse Galactic emission model. The total intensity attributed to the IGRB is $(7.2\pm0.6) \times 10^{-6}$ cm$^{-2}$ s$^{-1}$ sr$^{-1}$ above 100 MeV, with an additional $+15$%/$-30$% systematic uncertainty due to the Galactic diffuse foregrounds.

This paper has not been read by Pith yet.

discussion (0)

Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.

Forward citations

Cited by 4 Pith papers

Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

  1. Lights, Camera, Axion: Tracing Axions from Supernovae in the Diffuse $\gamma$-ray Sky

    hep-ph 2026-04 unverdicted novelty 7.0

    Axions produced in supernovae generate a diffuse gamma-ray signal through conversion in magnetic fields, yielding competitive constraints on the axion-photon coupling from COMPTEL, EGRET, and Fermi-LAT data plus forec...

  2. Particle Acceleration, Coronal Neutrino Production, and the Diffuse Extragalactic Neutrino Background from Supermassive Black Holes

    astro-ph.HE 2026-05 unverdicted novelty 6.0

    The cosmologically integrated neutrino emission from supermassive black hole coronae in Seyfert galaxies can account for the sub-PeV diffuse extragalactic neutrino flux observed by IceCube.

  3. The KM3NeT event: a primordial high energy neutrino?

    astro-ph.HE 2026-04 unverdicted novelty 5.0

    The KM3NeT neutrino event may be a primordial neutrino from relic particle decay or annihilation near recombination, yielding a narrow spectral peak that evades broad power-law constraints from other telescopes.

  4. Constraints on Primordial Black Holes

    astro-ph.CO 2020-02 accept novelty 4.0

    Updated compilation shows PBHs are tightly constrained across 55 orders of magnitude in mass, ruling out dominant dark matter contributions except in narrow windows, with many limits carrying observational uncertainties.