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Recent high energy gamma-ray results from SAS-2

Authors :
Thompson, D. J
Fichtel, C. E
Hartman, R. C
Kniffen, D. A
Bignami, G. F
Ogelman, H. B
Ozel, M. E
Tumer, T
Lamb, R. C
Publication Year :
1977
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 1977.

Abstract

Recent developments in gamma-ray astronomy due to the results from SAS-2 have focused on two areas. First, the emission from the plane of the Galaxy is the dominant feature in the gamma-ray sky. The galactic latitude and longitude distributions are consistent with the concept that the high-energy radiation originates from cosmic rays interacting with interstellar matter, and the measurements support a galactic origin for cosmic rays. Second, searches of the SAS-2 data for emission from localized sources have shown three strong discrete gamma-ray sources: the Crab nebula and PSR 0531 + 21, the Vela supernova remnant and PSR 0833-45, and a source near galactic coordinates 193 deg longitude, +3 deg latitude, which does not appear to be associated with other known celestial objects. Evidence has also been found for pulsed gamma-ray emission from two other radio pulsars, PSR 1818-04 and PSR 1747-46. A localized source near longitudes 76-80 deg may be associated with the X-ray source Cyg X-3.

Subjects

Subjects :
Astrophysics

Details

Language :
English
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.19780034272
Document Type :
Report