# A radiation transfer model for the Milky-Way: I. Radiation fields and   application to High Energy Astrophysics

**Authors:** C. C. Popescu (1,2,3), R. Yang (3,4), R.J. Tuffs (3), G. Natale (1),, M. Rushton (2), F. Aharonian (3,5) ((1) Jeremiah Horrocks Institute,, University of Central Lancashire, PR1 2HE, Preston, UK (2) The Astronomical, Institute of the Romanian Academy, Str. Cutitul de Argint 5, Bucharest,, Romania (3) Max Planck Institut f\"ur Kernphysik, (4) Key Laboratory of Dark, Matter, Space Astronomy, Purple Mountain Observatory, (5) School of Cosmic, Physics, Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies)

arXiv: 1705.06652 · 2017-07-26

## TL;DR

This paper develops a comprehensive, self-consistent model of the Milky Way's interstellar radiation fields across a broad spectrum, enabling improved predictions of gamma-ray interactions and cosmic ray processes.

## Contribution

It introduces the first self-consistent, axisymmetric radiative transfer model of the Milky Way's broad-band continuum emission, optimized with high-resolution observational data.

## Key findings

- Model predictions align well with observed SED of the Milky Way.
- The ISRF model impacts gamma-ray amplitude and spectral distribution predictions.
- Comparison with GALPROP shows differences in ISRF solutions.

## Abstract

We present a solution for the ultraviolet (UV) - submillimeter (submm) interstellar radiation fields (ISRFs) of the Milky Way, derived from modelling COBE, IRAS and Planck maps of the all-sky emission in the near-, mid-, far-infrared and submm.The analysis uses the axisymmetric radiative transfer (RT) model that we have previously implemented to model the panchromatic spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of star forming galaxies in the nearby universe, but with a new methodology allowing for optimisation of the radial and vertical geometry of stellar emissivity and dust opacity, as deduced from the highly resolved emission seen from the vantage point of the Sun. As such, this is the first self-consistent model of the broad-band continuum emission from the Milky Way. In this paper, we present model predictions for the spatially integrated SED of the Milky Way as seen from the Sun, showing good agreement with the data, and give a detailed description of the solutions for the distribution of ISRFs, as well as their physical origin, throughout the volume of the galaxy. We explore how the spatial and spectral distribution of our new predictions for the ISRF in the Milky Way affects the amplitude and spectral distribution of the gamma-rays produced via Inverse Compton scattering for cosmic ray electrons situated at different positions in the galaxy, as well as the attenuation of the gamma-rays due to interactions of the gamma-ray photons with photons of the ISRF. We also compare and contrast our solutions for the ISRF with those incorporated in the GALPROP package used for modelling the high energy emission from cosmic rays in the Milky Way.

## Full text

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## Figures

26 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1705.06652/full.md

## References

82 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1705.06652/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1705.06652