7–11 Aug 2017
Columbus, Ohio, USA
US/Eastern timezone

Determining the Intergalactic Photon Densities from Deep Galaxy Surveys and the Gamma-ray Opacity of the Universe

9 Aug 2017, 14:15
15m
Corinthian Room (The Athenaeum)

Corinthian Room

The Athenaeum

Oral Gamma rays Gamma rays

Speaker

Floyd Stecker (NASA Goddard Space Flight Center)

Description

We have calculated the extragalactic IR-UV photon density as a function of redshift, and the resulting IR-UV spectrum of the extragalactic background light. Our empirically-based approach is based on local-to-deep galaxy survey data obtained in different wavelength bands using many space-based telescopes. This approach allowed us, for the first time, to obtain a completely model independent determination of extragalactic photon densities, and also to quantify their uncertainties. Using our photon density results, we were able to place 68% confidence upper and lower limits on the opacity of the universe to gamma-rays as a function of energy and redshift. We compared our results with Fermi analyses of the spectra of extragalactic gamma-ray sources.

Primary author

Floyd Stecker (NASA Goddard Space Flight Center)

Presentation materials