scholarly journals Gamma Rays from Cosmic Rays

1981 ◽  
Vol 94 ◽  
pp. 309-319 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. W. Wolfendale

It is shown that there is evidence favouring molecular clouds being sources of γ-rays, the fluxes being consistent with expectation for ambient cosmic rays interacting with the gas in the clouds for the clouds considered. An estimate is made of the fraction of the apparently diffuse γ-ray flux which comes from cosmic ray interactions in the I.S.M. as distinct from unresolved discrete sources. Finally, an examination is made of the possibility of gradients of cosmic ray intensity in the Galaxy.

An examination is made of the contribution to the number of apparently discrete sources of y-rays from cosmic rays interacting with molecular clouds in the Galaxy. Attention is directed to specific nearby clouds and to clouds in general, the latter by a Monte-Carlo analysis.


1997 ◽  
Vol 170 ◽  
pp. 22-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seth. W. Digel ◽  
Stanley D. Hunter ◽  
Reshmi Mukherjee ◽  
Eugéne J. de Geus ◽  
Isabelle A. Grenier ◽  
...  

EGRET, the high-energy γ-ray telescope on the Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory, has the sensitivity, angular resolution, and background rejection necessary to study diffuse γ-ray emission from the interstellar medium (ISM). High-energy γ rays produced in cosmic-ray (CR) interactions in the ISM can be used to determine the CR density and calibrate the CO line as a tracer of molecular mass. Dominant production mechanisms for γ rays of energies ∼30 MeV–30 GeV are the decay of pions produced in collisions of CR protons with ambient matter and Bremsstrahlung scattering of CR electrons.


1996 ◽  
Vol 169 ◽  
pp. 437-446 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hans Bloemen

Gamma-ray astronomy has become a rich field of research and matured significantly since the launch of NASA's Compton Gamma Ray Observatory in April 1991. Studies of the diffuse γ-ray emission of the Galaxy can now be performed in far more detail and extended into the MeV regime, including both continuum and line emission. These studies provide unique insight into various aspects of the interstellar medium, in particular of the cosmic-ray component. This paper gives a brief review on the diffuse Galactic γ-ray emission and summarizes early results and prospects from the Compton Observatory.


1976 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-6 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. R. Webber

In recent years observations of γ-ray emission from the disk of the galaxy have provided a new opportunity for research into the structure of the spiral arms of our own galaxy. In Figure 1 we show a map of the structure of the disk of the galaxy as observed for γ-rays of energy > 100 MeV by the SAS-2 satellite (Fichtel et al. 1975). The angular resolution of these measurements is ~ 3°, and besides two point sources at l = 190° and 265° several features related to the spiral structure of the galaxy are evident in the data. Most of these γ-rays are believed to arise from the decay of π° mesons produced by the nuclear interactions of cosmic rays (mostly protons) with the ambient interstellar gas. As a result, the γ-ray fluxes represent a measure of the line of sight integral of the product of the cosmic ray density NCR and the interstellar matter density N1


1991 ◽  
Vol 144 ◽  
pp. 377-386
Author(s):  
Reinhard Schlickeiser

The recent observations of the nonthermal properties of the halo of our Galaxy at radio and γ-ray wavelengths are summarized. Radio and γ-ray data show a similar spectral flattening with Galactic height towards the anticenter direction, which is interpreted as a cosmic-ray effect. Several theoretical explanations for the flattening of the energy spectra of the radiating cosmic-ray electrons (in the radio) and nucleons (in γ-rays) are reviewed including propagation of cosmic rays in an accelerating Galactic wind and the presence of cosmic-ray sources with flat energy spectra in the halo.


1998 ◽  
Vol 188 ◽  
pp. 273-274
Author(s):  
V.B. Bhatia ◽  
S. Mishra ◽  
N. Panchapakesan

The SAS 2 and COS B observations have established the existence of diffuse γ-rays in our Galaxy in various energy ranges. The diffuse radiation is attributed to the interaction of cosmic ray nuclei and electrons with the particles of interstellar atomic and molecular gas (via the decay of pions and bremsstrahlung, respectively). Inverse Compton scattering of interstellar photons by the high energy electrons of cosmic rays may also be contributing to this background. In addition some contribution may come from discrete sources of γ-rays.


1985 ◽  
Vol 106 ◽  
pp. 225-233
Author(s):  
Catherine J. Cesarsky

Gamma rays of energy in the range 30 MeV-several GeV, observed by the satellites SAS-2 and COS-B, are emitted in the interstellar medium as a result of interactions with gas of cosmic-ray nuclei in the GeV range (π° decay γ rays) and cosmic-ray electrons of energy > 30 MeV (bremsstrahlung γ rays). W. Hermsen has presented at this conference the γ ray maps of the Galaxy in three “colours” constructed by the COS-B collaboration; the information in such maps is supplemented by radio-continuum studies (see lecture by R. Beck), and is a useful tool for studying the distribution of gas, cosmic rays (c.r.) and magnetic fields in the Galaxy. The variables in this problem are many:large-scale (~ 1 kpc) and small-scale (~10 pc) distributions of c.r. nuclei, of c.r. electrons, of atomic and molecular hydrogen, of magnetic fields, fraction of the observed radiation due to localized sources, etc. Of these, only the distribution - or at least the column densities - of atomic hydrogen are determined in a reliable way. Estimates of the amount of molecular hydrogen can be derived from CO observations or from galaxy counts. The radio and gamma-ray data are not sufficient to disentangle all the other variables in a unique fashion, unless a number of assumptions are made (e.g. Paul et al. 1976). Still, the COS-B team has been able to show that :a) there is a correlation between the gamma-ray emission from local regions, as observed at intermediate latitudes, and the total column density of dust, as measured by galaxy counts. The simplest interpretation is that the density of c.r. nuclei and electrons is uniform within 500 pc of the sun, and that dust and gas are well mixed. Then, γ rays can be used as excellent tracers of local gas complexes (Lebrun et al. 1982, Strong et al. 1982).b) In the same way, the simplest interpretation of the γ-ray emission at energy > 300 MeV from the inner Galaxy, is that c.r. nuclei and electrons are distributed uniformly as well : there is no need for an enhanced density of c.r. in the 3–6 kpc ring; on the contrary, even assuming a uniform density of c.r., the γ-ray data are in conflict with the highest estimates of molecular hydrogen in the radio-astronomy literature (Mayer-Hasselwander et al. 1982).c) In the outer Galaxy, the gradient of c.r. which had become apparent in the early SAS-2 data can now, with COS-B data, be studied in three energy ranges. A gradient in the c.r. distribution is only required to explain the low-energy radiation, which is dominated by bremsstrahlung from relativistic electrons (Bloemen et al., in preparation).


1999 ◽  
Vol 193 ◽  
pp. 205-217
Author(s):  
Roland Diehl

Gamma-rays from astrophysical sources testify energetic processes such as nucleosynthesis and cosmic ray collisions. Gamma-rays are observable from throughout the Galaxy, unattenuated by interstellar matter, provided their intensity exceeds the current instrumental sensitivity level (∼ 10−5ph cm−2s−1 at 1 MeV). Massive stars are at the origin of relevant sources: The all-sky image in the 1.809 MeV γ-ray line from radioactive 26Al traces nucleosynthesis throughout the Galaxy. The structure of this emission along the plane of the Galaxy suggests massive stars as dominating sources of this radioactivity. Discrimination of the contribution from core collapse supernova against that from WR-wind ejected hydrostatic nucleosynthesis products may be obtained from 60Fe γ-ray line observations, or from spatial-profile consequences of the metallicity dependence of 26Al production in theories for both source sites. As a single source, the nearest WR star in the γ2 Vel system is found to eject less 26Al into interstellar space than current theories predict. However, a more adequate comparison must be based on a time-dependent 26Al light-curve of the system. Furthermore, continuum γ-ray production in WR binaries through wind-wind interaction, and constraints on the low-energy cosmic ray origin in WR winds through characteristic nuclear deexcitation line studies are targets of research. Studies stimulated by COMPTEL'S 3–7 MeV excess report from the Orion region indicate that the γ-ray line measurements could separate the origins from supernova ejecta and wind material. The COMPTEL Orion result is now attributed chiefly to an instrumental artifact, and has been withdrawn. Nevertheless, the search for MeV emission from massive star clusters, as well as from interacting binaries such as WR 140, promises a unique test of particle acceleration scenarios related to the source mechanism for cosmic ray production.


Within our Galaxy, cosmic rays can reveal their presence in interstellar space and probably in source regions by their interactions with interstellar matter which lead to γ-rays with a very characteristic energy spectrum. From the study of the intensity of the high energy γ radiation as a function of galactic longitude, it is already clear that cosmic rays are almost certainly not uniformly distributed in the Galaxy and are not concentrated in the centre of the Galaxy. The galactic cosmic rays appear to be tied to galactic structural features, presumably by the galactic magnetic fields which are in turn held by the matter in the arm segments and the clouds. On the extra-galactic scale, it is now possible to say that cosmic rays are probably not at the density seen near the Earth. The diffuse celestial γ-ray spectrum that is observed presents the interesting possibility of cosmological studies and possible evidence for a residual universal cosmic ray density, which is much lower than the present galactic cosmic-ray density.


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