Preliminary Results of the Fermi High-Latitude Extended Source Catalog
Matthew Wood, Jonathan Biteau, Regina Caputo, Mattia Di Mauro, Manuel, Meyer (for the Fermi-LAT Collaboration)

TL;DR
This paper presents preliminary results from the Fermi LAT high-latitude extended source catalog, identifying extended gamma-ray sources and constraining the intergalactic magnetic field strength through analysis of pair halos.
Contribution
It reports the discovery of 21 extended gamma-ray sources and sets new limits on the intergalactic magnetic field strength using spectral and spatial analysis.
Findings
Identified 21 extended gamma-ray sources.
Constrained the intergalactic magnetic field to be stronger than 3×10⁻¹⁶ G.
Detected 16 previously uncharacterized extended sources.
Abstract
We report on preliminary results from the Fermi High-Latitude Extended Sources Catalog (FHES), a comprehensive search for spatially extended gamma-ray sources at high Galactic latitudes () based on data from the Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT). While the majority of high-latitude LAT sources are extragalactic blazars that appear point-like within the LAT angular resolution, there are several physics scenarios that predict the existence of populations of spatially extended sources. If Dark Matter consists of Weakly Interacting Massive Particles, the annihilation or decay of these particles in subhalos of the Milky Way would appear as a population of unassociated gamma-ray sources with finite angular extent. Gamma-ray emission from blazars could also be extended (so-called pair halos) due to the deflection of electron-positron pairs in the intergalactic magnetic field…
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