Gamma-ray emission from the Sagittarius dwarf spheroidal galaxy due to millisecond pulsars

Authors
  • R.M. Crocker
  • O. Macias ORCID logo
  • D. Mackey
  • M.R. Krumholz
  • S. Ando ORCID logo
  • S. Horiuchi
  • M.G. Baring
  • C. Gordon
  • T. Venville
  • A.R. Duffy
  • R.Z. Yang
  • F. Aharonian
  • J.A. Hinton
  • D. Song
  • A.J. Ruiter
  • M.D. Filipović
Publication date 11-2022
Journal Nature Astronomy
Volume | Issue number 6 | 11
Pages (from-to) 1317-1324
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Institute of Physics (IoP) - Institute for Theoretical Physics Amsterdam (ITFA)
Abstract
The Fermi bubbles are giant, γ-ray-emitting lobes emanating from the nucleus of the Milky Way discovered in ~1–100 GeV data collected by the Large Area Telescope on board the Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope. Previous work has revealed substructure within the Fermi bubbles that has been interpreted as a signature of collimated outflows from the Galaxy’s supermassive black hole. Here we show via a spatial template analysis that much of the γ-ray emission associated with the brightest region of substructure—the so-called cocoon—is probably due to the Sagittarius dwarf spheroidal galaxy (dSph). This large Milky Way satellite is viewed through the Fermi bubbles from the position of the Solar System. As a tidally and ram-pressure stripped remnant, the Sagittarius dSph has no ongoing star formation, but we nevertheless demonstrate that the dwarf’s millisecond pulsar population can plausibly supply the γ-ray signal that our analysis associates with its stellar template. The measured spectrum is naturally explained by inverse Compton scattering of cosmic microwave background photons by high-energy electron–positron pairs injected by millisecond pulsars belonging to the Sagittarius dSph, combined with these objects’ magnetospheric emission. This finding plausibly suggests that millisecond pulsars produce significant γ-ray emission among old stellar populations, potentially confounding indirect dark-matter searches in regions such as the Galactic Centre, the Andromeda galaxy and other massive Milky Way dSphs.
Document type Article
Language English
Related dataset Astrophysical Templates for Crocker, Macias, et al. (2022)
Published at https://doi.org/10.1038/s41550-022-01777-x
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85137480388
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