Anomalous Flux in the Cosmic Optical Background Detected With New Horizons Observations
Tod R. Lauer, Marc Postman, John R. Spencer, Harold A. Weaver, S. Alan, Stern, G. Randall Gladstone, Richard P. Binzel, Daniel T. Britt, Marc W., Buie, Bonnie J. Buratti, Andrew F. Cheng, W.M. Grundy, Mihaly Hor\'anyi, J.J., Kavelaars, Ivan R. Linscott, Carey M. Lisse

TL;DR
Using New Horizons data, the study detects an excess optical background flux that cannot be explained solely by known galaxies, suggesting the presence of an unknown component in the cosmic optical background.
Contribution
First measurement of the cosmic optical background using New Horizons, reducing uncertainties from galactic and stellar scattered light, revealing an excess flux beyond known galaxy contributions.
Findings
Detected significant excess in the cosmic optical background.
Excess flux is comparable to the integrated light of known galaxies.
Results challenge the assumption that all COB originates from known galaxies.
Abstract
We used New Horizons LORRI images to measure the optical-band () sky brightness within a high galactic-latitude field selected to have reduced diffuse scattered light from the Milky Way galaxy (DGL), as inferred from the IRIS all-sky m map. We also selected the field to significantly reduce the scattered light from bright stars (SSL) outside the LORRI field. Suppression of DGL and SSL reduced the large uncertainties in the background flux levels present in our earlier New Horizons COB results. The raw total sky level, measured when New Horizons was 51.3 AU from the Sun, is Isolating the COB contribution to the raw total required subtracting scattered light from bright stars and galaxies, faint stars below the photometric detection-limit within the field, and the hydrogen plus ionized-helium…
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