Characterising the signatures of star-forming galaxies in the extra-galactic $\gamma$-ray background
Ellis R. Owen, Khee-Gan Lee, Albert K. H. Kong

TL;DR
This paper models the gamma-ray emission from star-forming galaxies across cosmic history, demonstrating their potential contribution to the extragalactic gamma-ray background and how their signatures can be detected with current and future gamma-ray observatories.
Contribution
It introduces a method to estimate the gamma-ray emission spectrum of star-forming galaxies using few key parameters and assesses their anisotropic signatures in the gamma-ray background.
Findings
Star-forming galaxies contribute to the gamma-ray background.
Anisotropic signatures can be detected via spatial power spectrum.
Next-generation observatories will improve detection prospects.
Abstract
Galaxies experiencing intense star-formation episodes are expected to be rich in energetic cosmic rays (CRs). These CRs undergo hadronic interactions with the interstellar gases of their host to drive -ray emission, which has already been detected from several nearby starbursts. Unresolved -ray emission from more distant star-forming galaxies (SFGs) is expected to contribute to the extra-galactic -ray background (EGB). However, despite the wealth of high-quality all-sky data from the Fermi-LAT -ray space telescope collected over more than a decade of operation, the exact contribution of such SFGs to the EGB remains unsettled. We investigate the high-energy -ray emission from SFGs up to redshift above a GeV, and assess the contribution they can make to the EGB. We show the -ray emission spectrum from a SFG population can be determined…
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