Detection of gamma-ray emission from the Coma cluster with Fermi Large Area Telescope and tentative evidence for an extended spatial structure
Shao-Qiang Xi, Xiang-Yu Wang, Yun-Feng Liang, Fang-Kun Peng, Rui-Zhi, Yang, Ruo-Yu Liu

TL;DR
This paper reports the detection of gamma-ray emission from the Coma galaxy cluster using Fermi-LAT data, providing evidence for cosmic-ray protons and extended spatial structure in the emission.
Contribution
First detection of gamma-ray emission from the Coma cluster with evidence for spatial extension and implications for cosmic-ray content.
Findings
Gamma-ray emission coincides with the radio halo.
Tentative evidence for spatial extension of gamma-ray emission.
Cosmic-ray protons contribute about 2% to the thermal pressure.
Abstract
Many galaxy clusters have giant halos of non-thermal radio emission, indicating the presence of relativistic electrons in the clusters. Relativistic protons may also be accelerated by merger and/or accretion shocks in galaxy clusters. These cosmic-ray (CR) electrons and/or protons are expected to produce gamma-rays through inverse-Compton scatterings or inelastic collisions respectively. Despite of intense efforts in searching for high-energy gamma-ray emission from galaxy clusters, conclusive evidence is still missing so far. Here we report the discovery of MeV gamma-ray emission from the Coma cluster direction with an unbinned likelihood analysis of the 9 years of {\it Fermi}-LAT Pass 8 data. The gamma-ray emission shows a spatial morphology roughly coincident with the giant radio halo, with an apparent excess at the southwest of the cluster. Using the test statistic…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
