A population of gamma-ray emitting globular clusters seen with the Fermi Large Area Telescope
The Fermi LAT collaboration

TL;DR
This study analyzes gamma-ray data from the Fermi Telescope to detect and characterize emissions from globular clusters, estimating their millisecond pulsar populations and exploring implications for cluster evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive gamma-ray analysis of multiple globular clusters, estimating MSP populations and linking gamma-ray emission to stellar encounter rates.
Findings
Detected gamma-ray emission in 8 clusters.
Estimated 2600-4700 MSPs in Galactic globular clusters.
Found correlation between MSP populations and stellar encounter rates.
Abstract
Globular clusters with their large populations of millisecond pulsars (MSPs) are believed to be potential emitters of high-energy gamma-ray emission. Our goal is to constrain the millisecond pulsar populations in globular clusters from analysis of gamma-ray observations. We use 546 days of continuous sky-survey observations obtained with the Large Area Telescope aboard the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope to study the gamma-ray emission towards 13 globular clusters. Steady point-like high-energy gamma-ray emission has been significantly detected towards 8 globular clusters. Five of them (47 Tucanae, Omega Cen, NGC 6388, Terzan 5, and M 28) show hard spectral power indices and clear evidence for an exponential cut-off in the range 1.0-2.6 GeV, which is the characteristic signature of magnetospheric emission from MSPs. Three of them (M 62, NGC 6440 and NGC 6652) also…
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