GIANT GAMMA-RAY BUBBLES FROM FERMI-LAT: ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEUS ACTIVITY OR BIPOLAR GALACTIC WIND?

Data from the Fermi-LAT reveal two large gamma-ray bubbles, extending 50° above and below the Galactic center (GC), with a width of about 40° in longitude. The gamma-ray emission associated with these bubbles has a significantly harder spectrum (dN/dE ∼ E−2) than the inverse Compton emission from electrons in the Galactic disk, or the gamma rays produced by the decay of pions from proton–interstellar medium collisions. There is no significant spatial variation in the spectrum or gamma-ray intensity within the bubbles, or between the north and south bubbles. The bubbles are spatially correlated with the hard-spectrum microwave excess known as the WMAP haze; the edges of the bubbles also line up with features in the ROSAT X-ray maps at 1.5–2 keV. We argue that these Galactic gamma-ray bubbles were most likely created by some large episode of energy injection in the GC, such as past accretion events onto the central massive black hole, or a nuclear starburst in the last ∼10 Myr. Dark matter annihilation/decay seems unlikely to generate all the features of the bubbles and the associated signals in WMAP and ROSAT; the bubbles must be understood in order to use measurements of the diffuse gamma-ray emission in the inner Galaxy as a probe of dark matter physics. Study of the origin and evolution of the bubbles also has the potential to improve our understanding of recent energetic events in the inner Galaxy and the high-latitude cosmic ray population.

[1]  Jean-Luc Starck,et al.  THE FERMI-LAT HIGH-LATITUDE SURVEY: SOURCE COUNT DISTRIBUTIONS AND THE ORIGIN OF THE EXTRAGALACTIC DIFFUSE BACKGROUND , 2010, 1003.0895.

[2]  S. W. Digel,et al.  GLOBAL COSMIC-RAY-RELATED LUMINOSITY AND ENERGY BUDGET OF THE MILKY WAY , 2010, 1008.4330.

[3]  B. Anderson,et al.  Morphology of the Galactic dark matter synchrotron emission with self-consistent cosmic-ray diffusion models , 2010, 1004.3998.

[4]  S. Markoff Revelations in our own backyard: Chandra’s unique Galactic Center discoveries , 2010, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[5]  B. Fields,et al.  COSMIC GAMMA-RAY BACKGROUND FROM STAR-FORMING GALAXIES , 2010, 1003.3647.

[6]  D. Falceta-Gonçalves,et al.  PRECESSING JETS AND X-RAY BUBBLES FROM NGC 1275 (3C 84) IN THE PERSEUS GALAXY CLUSTER: A VIEW FROM THREE-DIMENSIONAL NUMERICAL SIMULATIONS , 2010, 1003.2406.

[7]  París,et al.  DISCOVERY OF A SUPERLUMINAL Fe K ECHO AT THE GALACTIC CENTER: THE GLORIOUS PAST OF Sgr A* PRESERVED BY MOLECULAR CLOUDS , 2010, 1003.2001.

[8]  T Glanzman,et al.  Spectrum of the isotropic diffuse gamma-ray emission derived from first-year Fermi Large Area Telescope data. , 2010, Physical review letters.

[9]  D. Malyshev,et al.  FERMI GAMMA-RAY HAZE VIA DARK MATTER AND MILLISECOND PULSARS , 2010, 1002.0587.

[10]  J. Bland-Hawthorn,et al.  THREE-DIMENSIONAL INTEGRAL FIELD OBSERVATIONS OF 10 GALACTIC WINDS. I. EXTENDED PHASE (≳10 Myr) OF MASS/ENERGY INJECTION BEFORE THE WIND BLOWS , 2010, 1001.4315.

[11]  et al,et al.  DETECTION OF GAMMA-RAY EMISSION FROM THE STARBURST GALAXIES M82 AND NGC 253 WITH THE LARGE AREA TELESCOPE ON FERMI , 2009, 0911.5327.

[12]  C. Law A MULTIWAVELENGTH VIEW OF A MASS OUTFLOW FROM THE GALACTIC CENTER , 2009, 0911.2061.

[13]  I. Smail,et al.  Searching for Evidence of Energetic Feedback in Distant Galaxies: A Galaxy Wide Outflow in a z~2 Ultraluminous Infrared Galaxy , 2009, 0911.0014.

[14]  Gregory Dobler,et al.  THE FERMI HAZE: A GAMMA-RAY COUNTERPART TO THE MICROWAVE HAZE , 2009, 0910.4583.

[15]  J. P. Harding,et al.  Morphological tests of the pulsar and dark matter interpretations of the WMAP haze , 2009, 0910.4590.

[16]  Youjun Lu,et al.  ON THE SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION AND THE ORIGIN OF HYPERVELOCITY STARS , 2009, 0910.3260.

[17]  Gabriel A. Caceres,et al.  THE WMAP HAZE FROM THE GALACTIC CENTER REGION DUE TO MASSIVE STAR EXPLOSIONS AND A REDUCED COSMIC RAY SCALE HEIGHT , 2009, 0910.1197.

[18]  A. R. Bazer-Bachi,et al.  Detection of Gamma Rays from a Starburst Galaxy , 2009, Science.

[19]  S. Veilleux,et al.  WARM MOLECULAR HYDROGEN IN THE GALACTIC WIND OF M82 , 2009, 0907.1422.

[20]  D. Merritt,et al.  SUBMITTED TO APJ Preprint typeset using LATEX style emulateapj v. 10/09/06 PERTURBATIONS OF INTERMEDIATE-MASS BLACK HOLES ON STELLAR ORBITS IN THE GALACTIC CENTER , 2022 .

[21]  A. Lazarian,et al.  A MODEL OF ACCELERATION OF ANOMALOUS COSMIC RAYS BY RECONNECTION IN THE HELIOSHEATH , 2009, 0905.1120.

[22]  M. Kaplinghat,et al.  Pulsars as the Source of the WMAP Haze , 2009, 0905.0487.

[23]  S. Sazonov,et al.  Discrete sources as the origin of the Galactic X-ray ridge emission , 2009, Nature.

[24]  E. Zweibel,et al.  SYNCHROTRON CONSTRAINTS ON A HYBRID COSMIC-RAY AND THERMALLY DRIVEN GALACTIC WIND , 2009, 0904.1964.

[25]  T. Paumard,et al.  EVIDENCE FOR X-RAY SYNCHROTRON EMISSION FROM SIMULTANEOUS MID-INFRARED TO X-RAY OBSERVATIONS OF A STRONG Sgr A* FLARE , 2009, 0903.3416.

[26]  Jihn E. Kim,et al.  Axionic dark energy and a composite QCD axion , 2009, 0902.3610.

[27]  A. Loeb,et al.  Lyα blobs as an observational signature of cold accretion streams into galaxies , 2009, 0902.2999.

[28]  M. Reid,et al.  Evidence of a pure starburst nature of the nuclear region of NGC 253 , 2009, 0902.1044.

[29]  J. Chiang,et al.  THE LARGE AREA TELESCOPE ON THE FERMI GAMMA-RAY SPACE TELESCOPE MISSION , 2009, 0902.1089.

[30]  Gemini-S,et al.  THE OPTICAL STRUCTURE OF THE STARBURST GALAXY M82. I. DYNAMICS OF THE DISK AND INNER-WIND , 2009, 0902.0064.

[31]  S. Nozawa,et al.  Formation of Galactic Center Magnetic Loops , 2008, 0812.3711.

[32]  Astronomy,et al.  Discriminating different scenarios to account for the cosmic e ± excess by synchrotron and inverse Compton radiation , 2008, 0812.0522.

[33]  S. Trippe,et al.  EVIDENCE FOR WARPED DISKS OF YOUNG STARS IN THE GALACTIC CENTER , 2008, 0811.3903.

[34]  J. W. Watts,et al.  An excess of cosmic ray electrons at energies of 300–800 GeV , 2008, Nature.

[35]  Warren R. Brown,et al.  THE ANISOTROPIC SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION OF HYPERVELOCITY STARS , 2008, 0811.0612.

[36]  R. Genzel,et al.  MONITORING STELLAR ORBITS AROUND THE MASSIVE BLACK HOLE IN THE GALACTIC CENTER , 2008, 0810.4674.

[37]  G. Skinner,et al.  Positron astronomy with SPI/INTEGRAL , 2008 .

[38]  Jessica R. Lu,et al.  Measuring Distance and Properties of the Milky Way’s Central Supermassive Black Hole with Stellar Orbits , 2008, 0808.2870.

[39]  Il,et al.  Measurements of cosmic-ray secondary nuclei at high energies with the first flight of the CREAM balloon-borne experiment , 2008, 0808.1718.

[40]  U. Oxford,et al.  The evolution of the galaxy Red Sequence in simulated clusters and groups , 2008, 0804.1517.

[41]  L. Ho Nuclear Activity in Nearby Galaxies , 2008, 0803.2268.

[42]  D. Finkbeiner,et al.  Extended Anomalous Foreground Emission in the WMAP Three-Year Data , 2007, 0712.1038.

[43]  H. Murakami,et al.  Suzaku Spectroscopy of an X-Ray Reflection Nebula and a New Supernova Remnant Candidate in the SgrB1 Region , 2007, 0712.0877.

[44]  T. Ensslin,et al.  Radio observational constraints on Galactic 3D-emission models , 2007, 0711.1572.

[45]  D. McCammon,et al.  The Milky Way’s Kiloparsec-Scale Wind: A Hybrid Cosmic-Ray and Thermally Driven Outflow , 2007, 0710.3712.

[46]  P. Nulsen,et al.  Heating Hot Atmospheres with Active Galactic Nuclei , 2007, 0709.2152.

[47]  S. Veilleux,et al.  Galactic winds: a short review , 2007 .

[48]  J. Starck,et al.  A Catalog of Diffuse X-Ray-emitting Features within 20 pc of Sagittarius A*: Twenty Pulsar Wind Nebulae? , 2007, 0707.1907.

[49]  J. Bregman The Search for the Missing Baryons at Low Redshift , 2007, 0706.1787.

[50]  Gregory Dobler,et al.  Possible evidence for dark matter annihilations from the excess microwave emission around the center of the Galaxy seen by the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe , 2007, 0705.3655.

[51]  Dwingeloo,et al.  How to hide large-scale outflows: size constraints on the jets of Sgr A* , 2007, astro-ph/0702637.

[52]  T. Krichbaum,et al.  Jet–cloud collisions in the jet of the Seyfert galaxy NGC 3079 , 2007, astro-ph/0702481.

[53]  A. Strong,et al.  Cosmic-Ray Propagation and Interactions in the Galaxy , 2007, astro-ph/0701517.

[54]  T. Heckman,et al.  Iron Line and Diffuse Hard X-Ray Emission from the Starburst Galaxy M82 , 2006, astro-ph/0611859.

[55]  W. Brandt,et al.  Discovery of Variable Iron Fluorescence from Reflection Nebulae in the Galactic Center , 2006, astro-ph/0611651.

[56]  M. Shay,et al.  Electron acceleration from contracting magnetic islands during reconnection , 2006, Nature.

[57]  E. Ramirez-Ruiz,et al.  The Eddington Limit in Cosmic Rays: An Explanation for the Observed Faintness of Starbursting Galaxies , 2006, astro-ph/0609796.

[58]  T. Totani A RIAF Interpretation for the Past Higher Activity of the Galactic Center Black Hole and the 511 keV Annihilation Emission , 2006, astro-ph/0607414.

[59]  Todd A. Thompson,et al.  The Starburst Contribution to the Extragalactic γ-Ray Background , 2006, astro-ph/0606665.

[60]  S. Baum,et al.  A Survey of Kiloparsec-Scale Radio Outflows in Radio-Quiet Active Galactic Nuclei , 2006, astro-ph/0604219.

[61]  Edward J. Wollack,et al.  Three Year Wilkinson Microwave Anistropy Probe (WMAP) Observations: Polarization Analysis , 2006, astro-ph/0603450.

[62]  J. Sommer-Larsen Where Are the “Missing” Galactic Baryons? , 2006, astro-ph/0602595.

[63]  E. Quataert,et al.  Magnetic Fields in Starburst Galaxies and the Origin of the FIR-Radio Correlation , 2006, astro-ph/0601626.

[64]  T. Paumard,et al.  The Two Young Star Disks in the Central Parsec of the Galaxy: Properties, Dynamics, and Formation , 2006, astro-ph/0601268.

[65]  C. Lawrence,et al.  Discovery of a 500 Parsec Shell in the Nucleus of Centaurus A , 2006, astro-ph/0601147.

[66]  G. Weidenspointner,et al.  Radioactive 26Al from massive stars in the Galaxy , 2006, Nature.

[67]  S. Shapiro,et al.  A Multiwavelength Study of Sgr A*: The Role of Near-IR Flares in Production of X-Ray, Soft γ-Ray, and Submillimeter Emission , 2005, astro-ph/0510787.

[68]  Donald P. Cox,et al.  THE THREE-PHASE INTERSTELLAR MEDIUM REVISITED , 2005 .

[69]  J. Higdon,et al.  OB Associations, Supernova-generated Superbubbles, and the Source of Cosmic Rays , 2005 .

[70]  Chen Hu,et al.  Captures of Red Giant Stars by Black Holes in Elliptical Galaxies: Feedback to the Hot Gas , 2005, astro-ph/0508021.

[71]  S. Veilleux,et al.  Galactic Winds , 2005, astro-ph/0504435.

[72]  Isabelle A. Grenier,et al.  Unveiling Extensive Clouds of Dark Gas in the Solar Neighborhood , 2005, Science.

[73]  Linda J. Smith,et al.  The Formation and Evolution of Massive Young Star Clusters , 2004 .

[74]  D. Finkbeiner Microwave Interstellar Medium Emission Observed by the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe , 2004 .

[75]  W. Cotton,et al.  A 20 Centimeter Survey of the Galactic Center Region. I. Detection of Numerous Linear Filaments , 2004, astro-ph/0409292.

[76]  Cambridge,et al.  Hard X-ray view of the past activity of Sgr A in a natural Compton mirror , 2004, astro-ph/0408190.

[77]  A. Stark,et al.  Gas Density, Stability, and Starbursts near the Inner Lindblad Resonance of the Milky Way , 2004, astro-ph/0405330.

[78]  D. O. Astronomy,et al.  Interstellar Turbulence I: Observations and Processes , 2004, astro-ph/0404451.

[79]  A. Eckart,et al.  First simultaneous NIR/X-ray detection of a flare from Sgr A , 2004, astro-ph/0403577.

[80]  MIT,et al.  Diffuse X-Ray Emission in a Deep Chandra Image of the Galactic Center , 2004, astro-ph/0402087.

[81]  T. Lazio,et al.  New Nonthermal Filaments at the Galactic Center: Are They Tracing a Globally Ordered Magnetic Field? , 2004, astro-ph/0402061.

[82]  D. Finkbeiner Microwave ISM Emission Observed by WMAP , 2003, astro-ph/0311547.

[83]  S. Tremaine,et al.  Ejection of Hypervelocity Stars by the (Binary) Black Hole in the Galactic Center , 2003, astro-ph/0309084.

[84]  T. Yoshida,et al.  Evidence of TeV gamma-ray emission from the nearby starburst galaxy NGC 253 , 2003, astro-ph/0304295.

[85]  Y. Sofue Galactic Center Shells and a Recurrent Starburst Model , 2003, astro-ph/0303328.

[86]  Douglas P. Finkbeiner,et al.  A Full-Sky Hα Template for Microwave Foreground Prediction , 2003, astro-ph/0301558.

[87]  W. N. Brandt,et al.  A Deep Chandra Catalog of X-Ray Point Sources toward the Galactic Center , 2003, astro-ph/0301371.

[88]  J. Bland-Hawthorn,et al.  The Large-Scale Bipolar Wind in the Galactic Center , 2002, astro-ph/0208553.

[89]  H. Falcke,et al.  A Jet-ADAF model for Sgr A* , 2001, astro-ph/0112464.

[90]  T. Stanev,et al.  Ultrahigh-Energy Cosmic-Ray Propagation in the Galaxy: Clustering versus Isotropy , 2001, astro-ph/0112227.

[91]  UCLA,et al.  Chandra X-Ray Spectroscopic Imaging of Sagittarius A* and the Central Parsec of the Galaxy , 2001, astro-ph/0102151.

[92]  D. Hartmann,et al.  The Milky Way in Molecular Clouds: A New Complete CO Survey , 2000, astro-ph/0009217.

[93]  D. Strickland,et al.  Starburst-driven galactic winds — I. Energetics and intrinsic X-ray emission , 2000, astro-ph/0001395.

[94]  Y. Sofue Bipolar Hypershell Galactic Center Starburst Model: Further Evidence from ROSAT Data and New Radio and X-Ray Simulations , 1999, astro-ph/9912528.

[95]  Neil Gehrels,et al.  GLAST: The Next-Generation High-Energy Gamma-Ray Astronomy Mission , 1999 .

[96]  Roger D. Blandford,et al.  On the fate of gas accreting at a low rate on to a black hole , 1998, astro-ph/9809083.

[97]  R. Sunyaev,et al.  EQUIVALENT WIDTH, SHAPE AND PROPER MOTION OF THE IRON FLUORESCENT LINE EMISSION FROM MOLECULAR CLOUDS AS AN INDICATOR OF THE ILLUMINATING SOURCE X-RAY FLUX HISTORY , 1998 .

[98]  D. Schlegel,et al.  Maps of Dust Infrared Emission for Use in Estimation of Reddening and Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation Foregrounds , 1998 .

[99]  D. M. Kelly,et al.  The Nuclear Starburst in NGC 253 , 1998, astro-ph/9805153.

[100]  E. Kolaczyk,et al.  Evidence for a Galactic gamma-ray halo , 1998, astro-ph/9803237.

[101]  D. Schlegel,et al.  Maps of Dust IR Emission for Use in Estimation of Reddening and CMBR Foregrounds , 1997, astro-ph/9710327.

[102]  Dan McCammon,et al.  ROSAT Survey Diffuse X-Ray Background Maps. II. , 1997 .

[103]  A. Wolfendale,et al.  The `extragalactic' diffuse gamma ray intensity , 1997 .

[104]  W. I. Axford,et al.  Bi-directional plasma jets produced by magnetic reconnection on the Sun , 1997, Nature.

[105]  R. Rosner,et al.  The Origin of Filaments in the Interstellar Medium , 1996 .

[106]  D. Sokoloff,et al.  Galactic Magnetism: Recent developments and perspectives , 1996 .

[107]  Eugene Serabyn,et al.  THE GALACTIC CENTER ENVIRONMENT , 1996 .

[108]  Yasuo Tanaka,et al.  ASCA View of Our Galactic Center: Remains of Past Activities in X-Rays? , 1996 .

[109]  Roland Diehl,et al.  Radioactive 26Al in the galaxy: observations versus theory , 1996 .

[110]  D. Hartmann Were There Significant Starburst Episodes near the Galactic Center , 1995 .

[111]  J. Irwin,et al.  The Nuclear Structure of NGC 3079 , 1995 .

[112]  D. Breitschwerdt,et al.  Delayed recombination as a major source of the soft X-ray background , 1994, Nature.

[113]  Mikhail N. Pavlinsky,et al.  The center of the Galaxy in the recent past : a view from Granat , 1993 .

[114]  Y. Sofue,et al.  Outflowing molecular gas in NGC 3079 , 1992 .

[115]  Frank C. Jones,et al.  The plasma physics of shock acceleration , 1989 .

[116]  E. Seaquist,et al.  Nuclear Jets in the Radio Lobe Spiral Galaxy NGC 3079 , 1988 .

[117]  Martin J. Rees,et al.  Tidal disruption of stars by black holes of 106–108 solar masses in nearby galaxies , 1988, Nature.

[118]  J. Hills,et al.  Hyper-velocity and tidal stars from binaries disrupted by a massive Galactic black hole , 1988, Nature.

[119]  P. McCarthy,et al.  Evidence for Large-Scale Winds from Starburst Galaxies. I. The Nature of the Ionized Gas in M82 and NGC 253 , 1987 .

[120]  Dieter Biskamp,et al.  Magnetic Reconnection via Current Sheets , 1986 .

[121]  R. Chevalier,et al.  Wind from a starburst galaxy nucleus , 1985, Nature.

[122]  C. L. Bhat,et al.  Acceleration of cosmic rays in the Loop I ‘supernova remnant’? , 1985, Nature.

[123]  C. Fichtel,et al.  The diffuse galactic gamma radiation - The Compton contribution and component separation by energy interval and galactic coordinates , 1981 .

[124]  J. Hills Encounters between binary and single stars and their effect on the dynamical evolution of stellar systems , 1975 .

[125]  D. Thompson,et al.  High energy gamma ray results from the second small astronomy satellite , 1975 .

[126]  F. Ipavich Galactic winds driven by cosmic rays , 1975 .

[127]  A. Taylor,et al.  Isolates of Puccinia striiformis collected in England from the Wheat Varieties Maris Beacon and Joss Cambier , 1972, Nature.

[128]  G. Blumenthal,et al.  BREMSSTRAHLUNG, SYNCHROTRON RADIATION, AND COMPTON SCATTERING OF HIGH- ENERGY ELECTRONS TRAVERSING DILUTE GASES. , 1970 .

[129]  C. Haslam,et al.  A New Feature of the Radio Sky , 1962 .

[130]  H. Bloemen Diffuse Galactic gamma-ray emission , 1989 .

[131]  J. R. Jokipii,et al.  Ultra-high-energy cosmic rays in a galactic wind and its termination shock , 1987 .

[132]  A. Strong Studies of high-latitude gamma rays , 1984 .

[133]  J. Bardeen,et al.  The Lense-Thirring Effect and Accretion Disks around Kerr Black Holes , 1975 .

[134]  N. Scoville KINEMATICS OF MOLECULAR CLOUDS NEAR THE GALACTIC CENTER. , 1972 .

[135]  R. Kulsrud,et al.  The Effect of Wave-Particle Interactions on the Propagation of Cosmic Rays , 1969 .