Cosmic Optical Background: the View from Pioneer 10/11
Y. Matsuoka, N. Ienaka, K. Kawara, S. Oyabu

TL;DR
This study uses Pioneer 10/11 data to constrain the cosmic optical background, finding it mainly from resolved galaxies and identifying a Galactic component, with implications for understanding cosmic light sources.
Contribution
First measurement of the cosmic optical background from Pioneer 10/11 data, separating Galactic and extragalactic components with improved accuracy.
Findings
COB brightness at blue and red bands measured as (1.8 +/- 0.9) and (1.2 +/- 0.9) x 10^(-9) erg/s/cm2/sr/A
Most COB originates from resolved normal galaxies, leaving little room for contributions from first stars
Diffuse Galactic light and extended red emission are characterized and quantified.
Abstract
We present the new constraints on the cosmic optical background (COB) obtained from an analysis of the Pioneer 10/11 Imaging Photopolarimeter (IPP) data. After careful examination of data quality, the usable measurements free from the zodiacal light are integrated into sky maps at the blue (~0.44 um) and red (~0.64 um) bands. Accurate starlight subtraction is achieved by referring to all-sky star catalogs and a Galactic stellar population synthesis model down to 32.0 mag. We find that the residual light is separated into two components: one component shows a clear correlation with thermal 100 um brightness, while another betrays a constant level in the lowest 100 um brightness region. Presence of the second component is significant after all the uncertainties and possible residual light in the Galaxy are taken into account, thus it most likely has the extragalactic origin (i.e., the…
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