DAMPE independently detects the Fermi bubbles at 26 sigma and the Galactic center GeV excess at 7 sigma, with the excess spectrum and morphology matching Fermi-LAT and fitting a 50 GeV dark matter particle annihilating to b quarks.
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Spectra of the western eROSITA bubbles reveal two uniform components at 0.60 keV and 0.21 keV with sub-solar abundances, plus a geometrical model constraining horizontal size to ~6 kpc but leaving vertical extent uncertain.
NE2025 refits the thick disk, thin disk, and spiral arms of the NE2001 model and adds refined clumps, delivering 20 times better median pulsar distance accuracy and 100 percent better scattering predictions than NE2001.
Galactic wind advection with a peak velocity of ~700 km/s reproduces cosmic ray spectral hardening from hundreds of GV and softening from a few TV without diffusion breaks, predicts a hard spectrum (index ~2) at 3-5 kpc altitudes consistent with Fermi bubbles, and shows the wind maintains disk metal
citing papers explorer
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Observations of the Fermi bubbles and the Galactic center excess with the DArk Matter Particle Explorer
DAMPE independently detects the Fermi bubbles at 26 sigma and the Galactic center GeV excess at 7 sigma, with the excess spectrum and morphology matching Fermi-LAT and fitting a 50 GeV dark matter particle annihilating to b quarks.
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The SRG/eROSITA diffuse soft X-ray background II. spectra and morphology of the eROSITA bubbles in the western Galactic hemisphere
Spectra of the western eROSITA bubbles reveal two uniform components at 0.60 keV and 0.21 keV with sub-solar abundances, plus a geometrical model constraining horizontal size to ~6 kpc but leaving vertical extent uncertain.
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NE2025: An Updated Electron Density Model for the Galactic Interstellar Medium
NE2025 refits the thick disk, thin disk, and spiral arms of the NE2001 model and adds refined clumps, delivering 20 times better median pulsar distance accuracy and 100 percent better scattering predictions than NE2001.
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Cosmic-Ray Spectra and Metal Budget Regulated by the Galactic Wind
Galactic wind advection with a peak velocity of ~700 km/s reproduces cosmic ray spectral hardening from hundreds of GV and softening from a few TV without diffusion breaks, predicts a hard spectrum (index ~2) at 3-5 kpc altitudes consistent with Fermi bubbles, and shows the wind maintains disk metal