Fermi Discovery of Gamma-Ray Emission from NGC 1275
The Fermi/LAT Collaboration: A. A. Abdo, et al, H.D. Aller, M.F., Aller, K.I. Kellermann, Y.Y. Kovalev, Y.A. Kovalev, M. L. Lister, A. B., Pushkarev

TL;DR
This paper reports the first detection of high-energy gamma-ray emission from NGC 1275 by the Fermi LAT, revealing variability and providing insights into the galaxy's energetic processes.
Contribution
It presents the discovery of gamma-ray emission from NGC 1275 with detailed spectral analysis and variability assessment, using Fermi LAT data.
Findings
Gamma-ray emission detected at E>100 MeV from NGC 1275.
Flux is consistent with a constant source over four months.
Historical data suggest variability on yearly to decadal timescales.
Abstract
We report the discovery of high-energy (E>100 MeV) gamma-ray emission from NGC 1275, a giant elliptical galaxy lying at the center of the Perseus cluster of galaxies, based on observations made with the Large Area Telescope (LAT) of the Fermi Gamma ray Space Telescope. The positional center of the gamma-ray source is only ~3' away from the NGC 1275 nucleus, well within the 95% LAT error circle of ~5'.The spatial distribution of gamma-ray photons is consistent with a point source. The average flux and power-law photon index measured with the LAT from 2008 August 4 to 2008 December 5 are F_gamma = (2.10+-0.23)x 10^{-7} ph (>100 MeV) cm^{-2} s^{-1} and Gamma = 2.17+-0.05, respectively. The measurements are statistically consistent with constant flux during the four-month LAT observing period.Previous EGRET observations gave an upper limit of F_gamma < 3.72x 10 ^{-8} ph (>100 MeV) cm^{-2}…
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