论文标题
由于毫秒脉冲星,来自射手群矮人球形星系的伽马射线排放
Gamma-ray emission from the Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal galaxy due to millisecond pulsars
论文作者
论文摘要
费米气泡是巨大的,伽马射线发出的裂片是从大面积望远镜收集的〜1-100 GEV数据中发现的银河系核中产生的,该数据由Fermi Gamma-ray-ray空间望远镜收集。先前的工作揭示了费米气泡内的子结构,这些子结构被解释为来自银河系超质黑洞的准直流的标志。在这里,我们通过空间模板分析显示,与最亮的亚结构区域(所谓的茧)相关的大部分伽马射线发射可能是由于射手座矮人球形(SGR DSPH)星系所致。通过太阳系的位置,通过费米气泡查看了这种大的银河系卫星。作为潮汐和拉伸压力剥离的残余物,SGR DSPH没有持续的恒星形成,但是我们仍然证明,矮人的毫秒脉冲星(MSP)种群可以合理地提供我们的分析与其恒星模板相关的gamma-ray信号。测得的光谱自然是通过cosmic微波背景光子逆综合散射通过属于SGR DSPH的MSP注射的高能量电子峰值光子对,结合了这些物体的磁层发射。这一发现合理地表明,MSP在旧的恒星种群中产生了明显的伽马射线发射,可能会在银河中心,仙女座星系和其他庞大的银河系矮小的区域中进行间接暗物质搜索。
The Fermi Bubbles are giant, gamma-ray emitting lobes emanating from the nucleus of the Milky Way discovered in ~1-100 GeV data collected by the Large Area Telescope on board the Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope. Previous work has revealed substructure within the Fermi Bubbles that has been interpreted as a signature of collimated outflows from the Galaxy's super-massive black hole. Here we show via a spatial template analysis that much of the gamma-ray emission associated to the brightest region of substructure -- the so-called cocoon -- is likely due to the Sagittarius dwarf spheroidal (Sgr dSph) galaxy. This large Milky Way satellite is viewed through the Fermi Bubbles from the position of the Solar System. As a tidally and ram-pressure stripped remnant, the Sgr dSph has no on-going star formation, but we nevertheless demonstrate that the dwarf's millisecond pulsar (MSP) population can plausibly supply the gamma-ray signal that our analysis associates to its stellar template. The measured spectrum is naturally explained by inverse Compton scattering of cosmic microwave background photons by high-energy electron-positron pairs injected by MSPs belonging to the Sgr dSph, combined with these objects' magnetospheric emission. This finding plausibly suggests that MSPs produce significant gamma-ray emission amongst old stellar populations, potentially confounding indirect dark matter searches in regions such as the Galactic Centre, the Andromeda galaxy, and other massive Milky Way dwarf spheroidals.