Gamma-rays from star-forming regions: from SNOBs to dark accelerators
Thierry Montmerle

TL;DR
This paper reviews the history of gamma-ray astronomy, discusses the detection of gamma-ray sources in star-forming regions, and proposes using millimeter observations to study cosmic-ray interactions in molecular clouds.
Contribution
It introduces a new approach using millimeter observations to probe cosmic-ray interactions in star-forming regions, complementing gamma-ray data.
Findings
Detection of gamma-ray emissions from SNOB-like objects such as IC443 and W28.
Spatial evidence for cosmic-ray interactions with molecular clouds.
Proposal of millimeter observations to study ionization in gamma-ray bright clouds.
Abstract
Observational gamma-ray astronomy was born some forty years ago, when small detectors were flown in satellites, following a decade of theoretical predictions of its potential to discover the origin of cosmic rays via the pi-zero decay mechanism. The seventies were a golden era for gamma-ray and cosmic-ray astrophysics, with the (re)discovery of the "diffuse shock acceleration" theory for cosmic rays, and the first CO and GeV gamma-ray surveys of the galactic plane, verifying the importance of pi-zero decay in the large-scale gamma-ray emission of the Galaxy. But because of this strong galactic background, GeV gamma-ray sources were hard to identify. The first such sources definitely identified were three pulsars, with a suggestion that supernova remnants interacting with molecular clouds in massive star-forming regions ("SNOBs") were also gamma-ray sources. Because of their improved…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNuclear Physics and Applications · Particle Detector Development and Performance · Atomic and Subatomic Physics Research
