The Solar Disk baffles in High Energy
Does the Sun shine in high-energy gamma rays? Apparently so, in the form of a halo surrounding itself. But certain features of this gamma-ray halo are perplexing.
Does the Sun shine in high-energy gamma rays? Apparently so, in the form of a halo surrounding itself. But certain features of this gamma-ray halo are perplexing.
In 2010 the Fermi-LAT reported a surprising discovery: detection of a gamma ray transient that appeared to come from a nova, V407 Cyg. Since V407 Cyg is a special type of nova, however, it was considered a one-off event. Now two other classical novae have also been found in gamma rays.
As Astrobites reported a couple of months ago, the Fermi-LAT gamma-ray telescope has reported an anomalous peak at 130 GeV, which could be the long-sought annihilation signature of dark matter. However, one of the strongest critiques of this potential discovery is that the signal is not coming from Sgr A*, the dynamical center of the Milky Way, but rather from about 200 parsecs away. Kuhlen et al. challenge the idea that the dark matter peak must be located at the dynamical center, and find that the combined dark matter-baryonic matter simulation Eris shows a well-defined, consistent offset between its dark matter peak and dynamical center.