Discovery of an extended source of gamma-ray emission in the Southern Hemisphere
Miguel Araya

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a large, high-energy gamma-ray emission region in the Southern Hemisphere, with a hard spectrum, possibly originating from an unknown supernova remnant.
Contribution
First detection of an extended gamma-ray source in the Southern Hemisphere with detailed spectral analysis and hypotheses on its origin.
Findings
Region is approximately 3.4 degrees wide.
Spectrum follows a power-law with index 1.68.
Flux above 0.7 GeV measured at 4.71e-9 cm^-2 s^-1.
Abstract
We report the discovery of a -wide region of high-energy emission in data from the \emph{Fermi} LAT satellite. The centroid of the emission is located in the Southern Hemisphere sky, a few degrees away from the plane of the Galaxy at the Galactic coordinates l=350.6, b=-4.7. It shows a hard spectrum that is compatible with a simple power-law, , in the energy range 0.7--500 GeV, with a spectral index . The integrated source photon flux above 0.7 GeV is cm s. We discuss several hypotheses for the nature of the source, particularly that the emission comes from the shell of an unknown supernova remnant.
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