# Astrophysical interpretation of the anisotropies in the unresolved   gamma-ray background

**Authors:** Shin'ichiro Ando, Mattia Fornasa, Nicolao Fornengo, Marco Regis,, Hannes-S. Zechlin

arXiv: 1701.06988 · 2017-06-21

## TL;DR

This study analyzes gamma-ray background anisotropies using Fermi LAT data, revealing evidence for a new class of faint gamma-ray sources with soft spectra, beyond known blazars and galaxy populations.

## Contribution

First to fit new APS data with a model of unresolved blazars and identify a significant excess indicating a new gamma-ray source class.

## Key findings

- Unresolved blazars under-produce APS below 1 GeV with source masking in 3FGL.
- Evidence for a new gamma-ray source class with a soft spectrum (spectral index 2.7-3.2).
- New source class likely contributes significantly to the isotropic gamma-ray background.

## Abstract

Recently, a new measurement of the auto- and cross-correlation angular power spectrum (APS) of the isotropic gamma-ray background was performed, based on 81 months of data of the Fermi Large-Area Telescope (LAT). Here, we fit, for the first time, the new APS data with a model describing the emission of unresolved blazars. These sources are expected to dominate the anisotropy signal. The model we employ in our analysis reproduces well the blazars resolved by Fermi LAT. When considering the APS obtained by masking the sources in the 3FGL catalogue, we find that unresolved blazars under-produce the measured APS below $\sim$1 GeV. Contrary to past results, this suggests the presence of a new contribution to the low-energy APS, with a significance of, at least, 5$\sigma$. The excess can be ascribed to a new class of faint gamma-ray emitters. If we consider the APS obtained by masking the sources in the 2FGL catalogue, there is no under-production of the APS below 1 GeV, but the new source class is still preferred over the blazars-only scenario (with a significance larger than 10$\sigma$). The properties of the new source class and the level of anisotropies induced in the isotropic gamma-ray background are the same, independent of the APS data used. In particular, the new gamma-ray emitters must have a soft energy spectrum, with a spectral index ranging, approximately, from 2.7 to 3.2. This complicates their interpretation in terms of known sources, since, normally, star-forming and radio galaxies are observed with a harder spectrum. The new source class identified here is also expected to contribute significantly to the intensity of the isotropic gamma-ray background.

## Full text

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## Figures

67 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1701.06988/full.md

## References

72 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1701.06988/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1701.06988