Searching for GeV gamma-ray emission from the bulge of M31
Li Feng, Zhiyuan Li, Meng Su, Pak-Hin T. Tam, Yang Chen

TL;DR
This study analyzes over 8 years of Fermi-LAT data to detect and characterize GeV gamma-ray emission from M31, revealing a bulge component similar to the Galactic center excess but no Fermi bubble structure.
Contribution
It provides the first evidence of a centrally-concentrated gamma-ray emission in M31, modeled with disk and bulge templates, and reports a new point-like source near M31.
Findings
Bulge component has TS=25.7, photon index 2.57
Total gamma-ray luminosity from bulge is ~1.16×10^38 erg/s
Detected a point-like source 10 kpc northwest of M31 disk
Abstract
The three major large-scale, diffuse -ray structures of the Milky Way are the Galactic disk, a bulge-like GeV excess towards the Galactic center, and the Fermi bubble. Whether such structures can also be present in other normal galaxies remains an open question. M31, as the nearest massive normal galaxy, holds promise for spatially-resolving the -ray emission. Based on more than 8 years of Fermi-LAT observations, we use (1) disk, (2) bulge, and (3) disk-plus-bulge templates to model the spatial distribution of the -ray emission from M31. Among these, the disk-plus-bulge template delivers the best-fit, in which the bulge component has a TS value 25.7 and a photon-index of , providing strong evidence for a centrally-concentrated gamma-ray emission from M31, that is analogous to the Galactic center excess. The total 0.2-300 GeV gamma-ray luminosity from…
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