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Evidence for Gamma-Ray Halos Around Active Galactic Nuclei and the First Measurement of Intergalactic Magnetic Fields

Published 11 May 2010 in astro-ph.HE, astro-ph.CO, and hep-ph | (1005.1924v2)

Abstract: Intergalactic magnetic fields (IGMF) can cause the appearance of halos around the gamma-ray images of distant objects because an electromagnetic cascade initiated by a high-energy gamma-ray interaction with the photon background is broadened by magnetic deflections. We report evidence of such gamma-ray halos in the stacked images of the 170 brightest active galactic nuclei (AGN) in the 11-month source catalog of the Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope. Excess over point spread function in the surface brightness profile is statistically significant at 3.5\sigma (99.95% confidence level), for the nearby, hard population of AGN. The halo size and brightness are consistent with IGMF, B_{IGMF} ~ 10{-15} G. The knowledge of IGMF will facilitate the future gamma-ray and charged-particle astronomy. Furthermore, since IGMF are likely to originate from the primordial seed fields created shortly after the Big Bang, this potentially opens a new window on the origin of cosmological magnetic fields, inflation, and the phase transitions in the early Universe.

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