The nature of the Diffuse Gamma-Ray Background
Mattia Fornasa, Miguel A. Sanchez-Conde

TL;DR
This review summarizes current understanding of the diffuse gamma-ray background, its components, modeling, recent measurements, and how it can inform astrophysical and exotic source contributions.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of the DGRB's composition, modeling approaches, recent observational data, and potential for future insights, highlighting areas for further research.
Findings
Recent Fermi LAT measurements of the DGRB spectrum.
Analysis of auto-correlation and cross-correlation of DGRB with large-scale structure.
Identification of known astrophysical sources contributing to the DGRB.
Abstract
We review the current understanding of the diffuse gamma-ray background (DGRB). The DGRB is what remains of the total measured gamma-ray emission after the subtraction of the resolved sources and of the diffuse Galactic foregrounds. It is interpreted as the cumulative emission of sources that are not bright enough to be detected individually. Yet, its exact composition remains unveiled. Well-established astrophysical source populations (e.g. blazars, misaligned AGNs, star-forming galaxies and millisecond pulsars) all represent guaranteed contributors to the DGRB. More exotic scenarios, such as dark matter annihilation or decay, may contribute as well. In this review, we describe how these components have been modeled in the literature and how the DGRB can be used to provide valuable information on each of them. We summarize the observational information currently available on the DGRB,…
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