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The Galactic Centre Region

The galactic centre as observed with IBIS/ISGRI onboard INTEGRAL. The image covers a region of about 2.5� x 1.5�. Credits: G. B�langer (CEA Saclay) et al. See larger image.

Paris, France (SPX) Sep 15, 2005
In an article to be published in the Astrophysical Journal, Belanger et al. present the results of a detailed analysis of approximately 1900 hours of observations of the galactic centre, obtained with Integral since the launch of the spacecraft in October 2002.

The IBIS/ISGRI imager on the Integral observatory detected for the first time a hard X-ray source, IGRJ17456�2901, located within 1 arcminute of Sagittarius A* (Sgr A* - the black hole residing at the centre of our Galaxy) over the energy range 20�100 keV.

Two years and an effective exposure of 4.7�106 s have allowed for obtaining more stringent positional constraints on this high-energy source and the construction of its spectrum in the energy range 20�400 keV.

This central source near Sgr A* appears not te be a point source as previously thought, but likely is a diffuse, but compact, source. The observations by Belanger et al. also show that the source is faint, but persistent with no detected variability.

The galactic centre as observed with IBIS/ISGRI onboard INTEGRAL. The image covers a region of about 2.5� x 1.5�. Credits: G. Belanger (CEA Saclay) et al.

By combining the ISGRI spectrum together with the total X-ray spectrum corresponding to the same physical region around Sgr A* from XMM-Newton data, and collected during part of the gamma-ray observations, Belanger et al. have also constructed the first accurate wide band high-energy spectrum for the central arcminutes of the Galaxy. These findings are also presented in the upcoming publication (see also 'Belanger et al. 2005').

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Star Death Beacon At The Edge Of The Universe
Brera, Italy (SPX) Sep 13, 2005
An Italian team of astronomers has observed the afterglow of a Gamma-Ray Burst that is the farthest known ever. With a measured redshift of 6.3, the light from this very remote astronomical source has taken 12,700 million years to reach us.







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