Abstract

Context. Measuring the diffuse Galactic γ-ray flux in the TeV range is difficult for ground-based γ-ray telescopes because of the residual cosmic-ray background, which is higher than the γ-ray flux by several orders of magnitude. Its detection is also challenging for space-based telescopes because of low signal statistics. Aims. We characterise the diffuse TeV flux from the Galaxy using decade-long exposures of the Fermi Large Area Telescope. Methods. Considering that the level of diffuse Galactic emission in the TeV band approaches the level of residual cosmic-ray background, we estimated the level of residual cosmic-ray background in the SOURCEVETO event selection and verified that the TeV diffuse Galactic emission flux is well above the residual cosmic-ray background up to high Galactic latitude regions. Results. We study spectral and imaging properties of the diffuse TeV signal from the Galactic plane. We find much stronger emission from the inner Galactic plane than in previous HESS telescope estimates (lower bound). We also find a significant difference in the measurement of the Galactic longitude and latitude profiles of the signal measured by Fermi and HESS. These discrepancies are presumably explained by the fact that regions of background estimate in HESS have non-negligible γ-ray flux. Comparing Fermi measurements with those of ARGO-YBJ, we find better agreement, with the notable exception of the Cygnus region, where we find much higher flux (by a factor 1.5). We also measure the TeV diffuse emission spectrum up to high Galactic latitude and show that the spectra of different regions of the sky have spectral slopes consistent with Γ = 2.34 ± 0.04, which is harder than the slope of the locally observed spectrum of cosmic rays with energies 10–100 TeV, which produce TeV diffuse emission on their way through the interstellar medium. We discuss the possible origin of the hard slope of the TeV diffuse emission. Conclusions. Fermi/LAT provides reliable measurements of the diffuse Galactic emission spectrum in the TeV range, which are almost background free at low Galactic latitudes. The diffuse flux becomes comparable to the residual cosmic-ray background at Galactic latitudes |b| > 50°. Its measurement in these regions might suffer from systematic uncertainty stemming from the uncertainty of our phenomenological model of the residual cosmic-ray background in the Pass 8 Fermi/LAT data.

Highlights

  • After ten years of operations, Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT; Atwood et al 2009) has accumulated statistics of the γ-ray signal from the sky sufficient for exploration of diffuse sky emission in the TeV band, which overlaps the energy band that is accessible to the ground-based γ-ray telescopes

  • Measuring the diffuse Galactic γ-ray flux in the TeV range is difficult for ground-based γ-ray telescopes because of the residual cosmic-ray background, which is higher than the γ-ray flux by several orders of magnitude

  • The overall level of the TeV γ-ray flux from the inner Galactic plane detected by Fermi/LAT is approximately twice higher than the flux detected by the High Energy Stereoscopic System (HESS) telescope from the analysis of the Galactic plane survey region (Abramowski et al 2014)

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Summary

Introduction

After ten years of operations, Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT; Atwood et al 2009) has accumulated statistics of the γ-ray signal from the sky sufficient for exploration of diffuse sky emission in the TeV band, which overlaps the energy band that is accessible to the ground-based γ-ray telescopes. Measuring diffuse emission is challenging because it is impossible to find an adjacent signal-free region on the sky from a priori considerations In this respect, even though the statistics of the Fermi/LAT signal is much lower than that of the ground-based telescopes, LAT measurements are complementary to the ground-based measurements and could be used for improvement of the ground-based measurements, for example, through identification of optimal regions for a background estimate

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