New Horizons Observations of the Cosmic Optical Background
Tod R. Lauer, Marc Postman, Harold A. Weaver, John R. Spencer, S. Alan, Stern, Marc W. Buie, Daniel D. Durda, Carey M. Lisse, A. R. Poppe, Richard P., Binzel, Daniel T. Britt, Bonnie J. Buratti, Andrew F. Cheng, W.M. Grundy,, Mihaly Horanyi J.J. Kavelaars, Ivan R. Linscott

TL;DR
Using New Horizons data, the study measures the cosmic optical background in a dark sky region, detects it significantly, and finds an unexplained diffuse component possibly due to undetected galaxies or survey limitations.
Contribution
This work provides the first measurement of the cosmic optical background using New Horizons, demonstrating its utility for detecting faint extragalactic light beyond Hubble's reach.
Findings
Detected the cosmic optical background at 0.608 μm with high significance.
Identified a diffuse flux component of unknown origin after subtracting galaxy light.
Suggests the need for steeper galaxy-count slopes or missing faint galaxies to explain the residual flux.
Abstract
We used existing data from the New Horizons LORRI camera to measure the optical-band () sky brightness within seven high galactic latitude fields. The average raw level measured while New Horizons was 42 to 45 AU from the Sun is This is darker than the darkest sky accessible to the {\it Hubble Space Telescope}, highlighting the utility of New Horizons for detecting the cosmic optical background (COB). Isolating the COB contribution to the raw total requires subtracting scattered light from bright stars and galaxies, faint stars below the photometric detection-limit within the fields, and diffuse Milky Way light scattered by infrared cirrus. We remove newly identified residual zodiacal light from the IRIS m all sky maps to generate two different estimates for the diffuse galactic light…
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.
