Gamma rays from extragalactic astrophysical sources
V. Bosch-Ramon

TL;DR
This paper reviews various extragalactic gamma-ray sources, including active galactic nuclei, gamma-ray bursts, star-forming galaxies, and galaxy clusters, discussing their gamma-ray production mechanisms and recent observational findings.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of gamma-ray emission processes across different extragalactic sources, highlighting recent developments and specific case studies.
Findings
Active galactic nuclei are the most energetic gamma-ray sources.
Star-forming galaxies have recently been identified as gamma-ray emitters.
Galaxy clusters have not yet been detected beyond X-ray emissions.
Abstract
Presently there are several classes of detected gamma-ray extragalatic sources. They are mostly associated to active galactic nuclei (AGN) and (at soft gamma rays) to gamma-ray bursts (GRB), but not only. Active galactic nuclei consist of accreting supermassive black holes hosted by a galaxy that present in some cases powerful relativistic jet activity. These sources, which have been studied in gamma rays for several decades, are probably the most energetic astrophysical objects, and their appearance depends much on whether their jets point to us. Gamma-ray bursts, thought to be associated to collapsing or merging stellar-mass objects at cosmological distances, are also accreting highly relativistic jet sources that shine strongly at high energies. These are very short-duration events, but they are also the most luminous. Recently, star formation galaxies have turned out to be also…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Dark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
