• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Astronomers May Have Found The Source Of The Milky Way’s “Fermi Cocoon”

September 6, 2022 by Deborah Bloomfield

Above and below the plane of the Milky Way lie the Fermi Bubbles, two orbs around 25,000 light-years across filled with hot gas and cosmic rays. They are a major source of gamma rays, too. Within them, there is a bright spot, the Fermi Cocoon, a mysterious feature with no clear source – until now. Astronomers believe they have found the culprit, and it’s a galaxy that is slowly being destroyed by ours.

This small galaxy is known as the Sagittarius Dwarf, a spheroidal galaxy that over a billion years has been “unspooled” by the Milky Way. The motion of this small satellite around our galaxy has stripped it of most of its gas and many of its stars, an act of galactic cannibalism.

Advertisement

The dwarf galaxy can be viewed right through the Fermi bubbles from the point of view of the Solar System and matches the location of the Fermi Cocoon, but without new massive stars being born and then going supernova, the gamma-ray emission is not easily explained. Astronomers put forward two ideas: either the dwarf galaxy has a population of millisecond pulsars waiting to be discovered or they were seeing the long-sought annihilation of dark matter.

According to their paper published in Nature Astronomy, the pulsar scenario is the most plausible. Pulsars are a type of neutron star, the end product of certain massive (but not too massive) stars going supernova. They rotate and emit pulses of radiation across many wavelengths including gamma rays. Millisecond pulsars, as the name suggests, spin on their axis every few milliseconds.

Fermi bubbles

Much of the Gamma-rays from the Fermi cocoon may be coming from the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy. Image credit: Crocker, Macias, Mackey, Krumholz, Ando, Horiuchi et al. (2022)

The Fermi bubbles were actually discovered when researchers were looking for evidence that dark matter, the hypothetical substance that surrounds all galaxies, might possibly produce gamma rays. Dwarf galaxies were considered an excellent target for such searches, so this new work shifts assumptions about that.

Advertisement

“This is significant because dark matter researchers have long believed that an observation of gamma rays from a dwarf satellite would be a smoking gun signature for dark matter annihilation,” co-author Dr Oscar Macias, from the University of Amsterdam, said in a statement sent to IFLScience.

“Our study compels a reassessment of the high energy emission capabilities of quiescent stellar objects, such as dwarf spheroidal galaxies, and their role as prime targets for dark matter annihilation searches.”

The team believes that the production of high-energy particles around the pulsars helps accelerate the photons from the cosmic microwave background to gamma-ray energies, creating the region we see as the Fermi Cocoon.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. From passion to hobby to startup
  2. Crypto’s networked collaboration will drive Web 3.0
  3. U.S. House panel to probe oil companies over climate disinformation
  4. Lordstown Motors in talks to sell Ohio plant to Foxconn -Bloomberg

Source Link: Astronomers May Have Found The Source Of The Milky Way’s “Fermi Cocoon”

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Humans Started Butchering Elephants 1.78 Million Years Ago In Tanzania
  • Unexpected Discovery Hints We Might Be Inside A Black Hole
  • Why Are People Talking About This “Square Structure” Captured On Mars?
  • The World Has Five Oceans, Not Four – Discover The Latest One
  • Just 80 Percent Of People Can Perceive This Optical Illusion And No One Knows Why
  • Something Other Than Geological Processes Or Humans Created These Caves
  • Can Black Holes Lead To Other Places In The Universe?
  • The Devastating Communication Problem Facing Light-Speed Travel
  • The Great British Pet Massacre: One Of The Saddest Tragedies Of 1939
  • Would A Vacuum-Filled Balloon Float?
  • Queen Ant Produces Babies Of 2 Different Species, For The First Time Ever We Have A Complete Map Of Brain Activity, And Much More This Week
  • Yes, Your Attention Span Might Have Shortened, But That Might Not Be A Terrible Thing
  • This May Be The First Known Portrait Of A Viking – And It’s A Sexually Rampant “Beard Fondler”
  • The Largest Snake In Captivity Is A Humongous 7.7-Meter Reticulated Python Called Medusa
  • Poo Power: How Animal Dung Could Unlock New Antibiotic Treatments
  • Perfectly Preserved Dinosaur Tail Found Inside 99-Million-Year-Old Amber Was Mistaken For A Plant
  • Why Aren’t Full Photos Of The Milky Way Real? A NASA Analyst Explains The Obvious
  • Freaky Ratfish Have Teeth Growing Out Of Their Foreheads, And They Use Them For Love
  • The Largest Turtle Ever Known To Have Lived Was An Absolute Unit
  • “It Literally Leapt Out Of The Rock At Us”: How Violent Storms Led To The Extraordinary Preservation Of Baby Pterosaurs
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version