Source: University of California, Riverside


This image shows a "direct" picture of the first four years of EGRET data. The intensity scale is logarithmic. To generate this picture, the sky is divided up into 1/2 degree squares. The number of photons which arrived from directions within each square is counted, and then plotted as an image. The dark blue dots in this picture each represent one photon, green and yellow about 10-20 photons, and red areas correspond to about 200 photons. The "graininess" or "noise" caused by the small number of photons in most squares makes it necessary to perform some added processing on this picture to see what the underlying gamma-ray brightness is.

The bright horizontal band along the center is the gamma-ray emission from the Milky Way galaxy, and is caused by high-energy cosmic rays interacting with interstellar matter and light. Many of the photons away from the Galactic plane are coming from outside the Milky Way, and form a uniform gamma-ray glow over the sky. Most of what is seen in this picture can be accounted for by known gamma-ray sources, and theoretical models of the Galactic and extra-Galactic gamma-ray emission. The recent discovery shows that there is an extra component, the "halo", above what is predicted.

An plain version of this figure is also available.


Contact: Kathy Barton
(909) 787-5326
e-mail: barton@ucrac1.ucr.edu

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