Analyzing the Gamma-ray Sky with Wavelets
Bhaskaran Balaji, Ilias Cholis, Patrick J. Fox, Samuel D. McDermott

TL;DR
This paper uses wavelet transforms to analyze gamma-ray data, revealing detailed structures like the Fermi Bubbles, cocoon features, and the Galactic center excess, providing insights into their diffuse or point-source nature.
Contribution
It introduces a wavelet-based method to characterize gamma-ray residuals, offering new insights into the morphology and nature of gamma-ray structures in the sky.
Findings
Detection of the Fermi Bubbles as diffuse structures with little small-scale structure.
Identification of the northern cocoon and its properties.
Characterization of the Galactic center excess and additional emissions along the Galactic disk.
Abstract
We analyze the gamma-ray sky at energies of 0.5 to 50 GeV using the undecimated wavelet transform on the sphere. Focusing on the inner of the sky, we identify and characterize four separate residuals beyond the expected Milky Way diffuse emission. We detect the \textit{Fermi} Bubbles, finding compelling evidence that they are diffuse in nature and contain very little small-scale structure. We detect the "cocoon" inside the Southern Bubble, and we also identify its northern counterpart above 2 GeV. The Northern Cocoon lies along the same axis but is dimmer than the southern one. We characterize the Galactic center excess, which we find extends up to in . At latitudes we find evidence for power in small angular scales that could be the result of point-source contributions, but for the…
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