Detection of Gamma-ray Halos around Nearby Late-type Galaxies
M.S. Pshirkov, B.A. Nizamov

TL;DR
This study detects a statistically significant extended gamma-ray halo around nearby late-type galaxies, likely caused by cosmic ray interactions with circumgalactic medium, rather than dark matter processes.
Contribution
First detection of an extended gamma-ray halo around late-type galaxies using aperture photometry and stacking likelihood analysis.
Findings
Significant gamma-ray excess with p-value 3.7×10⁻⁷ at E>2 GeV.
Halo radius estimated at approximately 80 kpc for galaxies within 15 Mpc.
No similar excess observed around early-type galaxies.
Abstract
Various theoretical models predict the existence of extended -ray halo around normal galaxies that could be produced by interactions of cosmic rays with the circumgalactic medium or by annihilation or decay of hypothetical dark matter particles. Observations of M31, the closest massive galaxy, also corroborate this possibility. In this study we search for gamma-ray emission from the galaxies within 15 Mpc at energies higher than 2 GeV and try to assess its spatial extension. We use the latest catalog of local galaxies and apply a simple yet robust method of aperture photometry. By imposing the mass, energy, and spatial cuts, we selected a set of 16 late-type galaxies and found a statistically significant excess above the background level: a p-value of at GeV, reaching maximal significance of for a subset of…
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