Gamma-rays as probes of the Universe
Dieter Horns (1), Agnieszka Jacholkowska (2) ((1) Universit\"at, Hamburg, Institut f\"ur Experimentalphysik, (2) LPHE)

TL;DR
This review discusses how gamma-ray observations can probe the intergalactic medium and test fundamental physics, including potential new phenomena like Lorentz invariance violation and axion-like particles, through their effects on gamma-ray propagation.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of current gamma-ray observational methods and their implications for understanding the universe and fundamental physics.
Findings
Constraints on the density of diffuse intergalactic photons.
Lower bounds on the energy scale of Quantum Gravity.
Evidence for or against gamma-ray transparency modifications.
Abstract
The propagation of rays over very large distances provides new insights on the intergalactic medium and on fundamental physics. On their path to the Earth, rays can annihilate with diffuse infrared or optical photons of the intergalactic medium, producing pairs. The density of these photons is poorly determined by direct measurements due to significant galactic foregrounds. Studying the absorption of rays from extragalactic sources at different distances allows the density of low-energy diffuse photons to be measured. Gamma-ray propagation may also be affected by new phenomena predicted by extensions of the Standard Model of particle physics. Lorentz Invariance is violated in some models of Quantum Gravity, leading to an energy-dependent speed of light in vacuum. From differential time-of-flight measurements of the most distant -ray bursts…
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