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arxiv: 1208.5483 · v1 · submitted 2012-08-27 · 🌌 astro-ph.GA · astro-ph.CO· astro-ph.HE

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Planck Intermediate Results. IX. Detection of the Galactic haze with Planck

Planck Collaboration: P. A. R. Ade , N. Aghanim , M. Arnaud , M. Ashdown , F. Atrio-Barandela , J. Aumont , C. Baccigalupi , A. Balbi
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A. J. Banday R. B. Barreiro J. G. Bartlett E. Battaner K. Benabed A. Beno\^it J.-P. Bernard M. Bersanelli A. Bonaldi J. R. Bond J. Borrill F. R. Bouchet C. Burigana P. Cabella J.-F. Cardoso A. Catalano L. Cay\'on R.-R. Chary L.-Y Chiang P. R. Christensen D. L. Clements L. P. L. Colombo A. Coulais B. P. Crill F. Cuttaia L. Danese O. D'arcangelo R. J. Davis P. De Bernardis G. De Gasperis A. De Rosa G. de Zotti J. Delabrouille C. Dickinson J. M. Diego G. Dobler H. Dole S. Donzelli O. Dor\'e U. D\"orl M. Douspis X. Dupac G. Efstathiou T. A. En{\ss}lin H. K. Eriksen F. Finelli O. Forni M. Frailis E. Franceschi S. Galeotta K. Ganga M. Giard G. Giardino J. Gonz\'alez-Nuevo K. M. G\'orski S. Gratton A. Gregorio A. Gruppuso F. K. Hansen D. Harrison G. Helou S. Henrot-Versill\'e C. Hern\'andez-Monteagudo S. R. Hildebrandt E. Hivon M. Hobson W. A. Holmes A. Hornstrup W. Hovest K. M. Huffenberger T. R. Jaffe T. Jagemann W. C. Jones M. Juvela E. Keih\"anen J. Knoche L. Knox M. Kunz H. Kurki-Suonio G. Lagache A. L\"ahteenm\"aki J.-M. Lamarre A. Lasenby C. R. Lawrence S. Leach R. Leonardi P. B. Lilje M. Linden-V{\o}rnle M. L\'opez-Caniego P. M. Lubin J. F. Mac\'ias-P\'erez B. Maffei D. Maino N. Mandolesi M. Maris P. G. Martin E. Mart\'inez-Gonz\'alez S. Masi M. Massardi S. Matarrese F. Matthai P. Mazzotta P. R. Meinhold A. Melchiorri L. Mendes A. Mennella S. Mitra M.-A. Miville-Desch\^enes A. Moneti L. Montier G. Morgante D. Munshi J. A. Murphy P. Naselsky P. Natoli H. U. N{\o}rgaard-Nielsen F. Noviello S. Osborne F. Pajot R. Paladini D. Paoletti B. Partridge T. J. Pearson O. Perdereau F. Perrotta F. Piacentini M. Piat E. Pierpaoli D. Pietrobon S. Plaszczynski E. Pointecouteau G. Polenta N. Ponthieu L. Popa T. Poutanen G. W. Pratt S. Prunet J.-L. Puget J. P. Rachen R. Rebolo M. Reinecke C. Renault S. Ricciardi T. Riller G. Rocha C. Rosset J. A. Rubi\~no-Mart\'in B. Rusholme M. Sandri G. Savini B. M. Schaefer D. Scott G. F. Smoot F. Stivoli R. Sudiwala A.-S. Suur-Uski J.-F. Sygnet J. A. Tauber L. Terenzi L. Toffolatti M. Tomasi M. Tristram M. T\"urler G. Umana L. Valenziano B. Van Tent P. Vielva F. Villa N. Vittorio L. A. Wade B. D. Wandelt M. White D. Yvon A. Zacchei A. Zonca
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classification 🌌 astro-ph.GA astro-ph.COastro-ph.HE
keywords galacticemissionhazeplanckspectrumcomponentcentreconsistent
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Using precise full-sky observations from Planck, and applying several methods of component separation, we identify and characterize the emission from the Galactic "haze" at microwave wavelengths. The haze is a distinct component of diffuse Galactic emission, roughly centered on the Galactic centre, and extends to |b| ~35 deg in Galactic latitude and |l| ~15 deg in longitude. By combining the Planck data with observations from the WMAP we are able to determine the spectrum of this emission to high accuracy, unhindered by the large systematic biases present in previous analyses. The derived spectrum is consistent with power-law emission with a spectral index of -2.55 +/- 0.05, thus excluding free-free emission as the source and instead favouring hard-spectrum synchrotron radiation from an electron population with a spectrum (number density per energy) dN/dE ~ E^-2.1. At Galactic latitudes |b|<30 deg, the microwave haze morphology is consistent with that of the Fermi gamma-ray "haze" or "bubbles," indicating that we have a multi-wavelength view of a distinct component of our Galaxy. Given both the very hard spectrum and the extended nature of the emission, it is highly unlikely that the haze electrons result from supernova shocks in the Galactic disk. Instead, a new mechanism for cosmic-ray acceleration in the centre of our Galaxy is implied.

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Cited by 1 Pith paper

Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

  1. Nested Fermi and eROSITA bubbles require very similar $\sim10^{56}$ erg collimated Galactic-center outbursts; their asymmetry indicates an eastern density gradient

    astro-ph.HE 2026-01 unverdicted novelty 5.0

    The Fermi and eROSITA bubbles likely result from identical ~10^56 erg collimated outbursts separated by ~10 Myr, with asymmetry indicating an eastern ambient density gradient.