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Surveying the gamma-ray sky continuously
by Staff Writers
Paris, France (SPX) May 19, 2020

Fermi sky map cumulating 10 years of observations at energies between 1 and 100 GeV, in Galactic coordinates. The color scale is logarithmic, from dark blue to yellow. The Milky Way corresponds to the horizontal red and yellow bar. It shines brightly in gamma rays because of nuclear interactions between the cosmic rays and the interstellar gas. The isolated red and yellow " dots " are the individual sources of gamma rays listed in the catalog. Credit: Fermi-LAT collaboration.

Fermi is a NASA satellite launched in June 2008, which carries the LAT (Large Area Telescope), a wide field telescope collecting gamma rays from 30 MeV to 1 TeV. It surveys the sky every three hours since August 2008. This continuous survey results in a catalog of sources provided to the scientific community, now at its fourth update called 4FGL.

More than two thousand sources were discovered since the previous catalog (3FGL) published in 2015. This improvement was made possible by doubling the observing time (8 years for 4FGL), understanding the detector better (Pass 8 data), improving the analysis methods, and modeling at higher resolution the interstellar emission of our Milky Way, which forms a complex background (see figure below) from which individual sources are difficult to sort out.

The catalog provides for each source its localization, its energy spectrum, its temporal variability (common) and its counterpart at other wavelengths when it can be found. Most sources (62%) are blazars, giant black holes at the center of faraway galaxies whose powerful jets of particles point toward us (making the jets much brighter).

A smaller fraction (5%) is made of pulsars, magnetized neutron stars rotating very fast, with a period less than one second, down to a few milliseconds. An even smaller fraction (3%) is shared between other types of sources located in our Milky Way including supernova remnants, which are suspected of accelerating the cosmic rays producing the interstellar emission.

Add a drop (2%) of other extragalactic sources, radio and starburst galaxies. The rest (28%) could not be associated to known objects, partly because the catalogs of counterparts are not deep enough, and because of confusion in the disk of the Milky Way. New types of sources are probably lurking among those unidentified sources, but it is difficult today to tell them apart from the commoners.

A pool of sources for follow-up studies This work has already been cited 150 times and will be, like the three previous catalogs, a starting point for many follow-up studies. The first of those is the 4LAC catalog of the 2863 active galactic nuclei detected by Fermi (see press release at CENBG), detailing their emission over the entire electromagnetic spectrum from radio waves to gamma rays.

Another application is the search for new pulsars, which can be set apart from blazars based on their curved spectrum and very weak variability. In a few years, the Fermi-LAT catalog will be the main pool of targets for the Cherenkov observatory CTA, currently in construction, which will detect gamma rays at even higher energies (around 1 TeV).

The LAT telescope keeps working and the results are regularly updated. The first incremental 4FGL catalog (Data Release 2) covers 10 years of data and is now on line at the NASA Fermi Science Support Center. The two additional years of observations allowed finding some 700 new gamma-ray sources. Most are close to the detection limit, but a few are very variable blazars whose jet became active over the last two years.

The next incremental catalog (DR3) will cover 12 years of observations and should be available in early 2021. In the longer run, the Fermi group at Saclay keeps improving the model of interstellar emission in order to increase the reliability of faint sources in the Milky Way. The LAT telescope has no identified successor to this day. It will be hard to beat!

Research Report: "Fermi Large Area Telescope Fourth Source Catalog"


Related Links
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Stellar Chemistry, The Universe And All Within It


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A team of Clemson University College of Science researchers, in collaboration with international colleagues, has reported the first definitive detection of a relativistic jet emerging from two colliding galaxies - in essence, the first photographic proof that merging galaxies can produce jets of charged particles that travel at nearly the speed of light. Furthermore, scientists had previously discovered that these jets could be found in elliptical-shaped galaxies, which can be formed in the mergin ... read more

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