Fermi-LAT Observations of High-Energy Gamma-Ray Emission Toward the Galactic Center
The Fermi-LAT Collaboration

TL;DR
This study analyzes 62 months of Fermi-LAT gamma-ray data near the Galactic Center, constructing specialized models to separate interstellar emission from point sources, revealing dominant inverse Compton processes and residual structures not fully explained by current templates.
Contribution
The paper introduces new interstellar emission models and a point source catalog for the inner Galaxy, improving separation of gamma-ray components and highlighting residual emissions.
Findings
Inverse Compton emission dominates in the region.
Residual emission remains after modeling known sources.
New point source catalog (1FIG) created.
Abstract
The Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) has provided the most detailed view to date of the emission towards the Galactic centre (GC) in high-energy gamma-rays. This paper describes the analysis of data taken during the first 62 months of the mission in the energy range 1-100 GeV from a region about the direction of the GC, and implications for the interstellar emissions produced by cosmic ray (CR) particles interacting with the gas and radiation fields in the inner Galaxy and for the point sources detected. Specialised interstellar emission models (IEMs) are constructed that enable separation of the gamma-ray emission from the inner kpc about the GC from the fore- and background emission from the Galaxy. Based on these models, the interstellar emission from CR electrons interacting with the interstellar radiation field via the inverse Compton (IC)…
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