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  4. The Spectrum of Isotropic Diffuse Gamma-Ray Emission between 100 MeV and 820 GeV
 
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The Spectrum of Isotropic Diffuse Gamma-Ray Emission between 100 MeV and 820 GeV

Author(s)
Ackermann, M.
Ajello, M.
Albert, A.
Cavazzuti, Elisabetta  
Ciprini, Stefano  
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Subjects

diffuse radiation

gamma rays diffuse ba...

Date Issued
2015-01-01
Mission(s)
Fermi  
Abstract
The γ-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 γ-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 (DGE), 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 ± 0.02 and a break energy of (279 ± 52) GeV using our baseline DGE model. The total intensity attributed to the IGRB is (7.2 ± 0.6) × 10–6 cm–2 s–1 sr–1 above 100 MeV, with an additional +15%/–30% systematic uncertainty due to the Galactic diffuse foregrounds.
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.13025/4125
DOI
10.1088/0004-637X/799/1/86
URL
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2015ApJ...799...86A
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