The solar disk is a bright source of multi-GeV gamma rays, due to the interactions of hadronic cosmic rays with the solar atmosphere. However, the underlying production mechanism is not understood, except that its efficiency must be greatly enhanced by magnetic fields that redirect some cosmic rays from ingoing to outgoing before they interact. To elucidate the nature of this emission, we perform a new analysis of solar atmospheric gamma rays with 9 years of Fermi-LIT data, which spans nearly the full 11-year solar cycle. We detect significant gamma-ray emission from the solar disk from 1 GeV up to greater than or similar to 200 GeV. The overall gamma-ray spectrum is much harder (similar to E-gamma(-2.2)) than the cosmic-ray spectrum (similar to E-CR(-2.7)). We find a clear anticorrelation between the solar cycle phase and the gamma-ray flux between 1 and 10 GeV. Surprisingly, we observe a spectral dip between similar to 30 and 50 GeV in an otherwise power-law spectrum. This was not predicted, is not understood, and may provide crucial clues to the gamma-ray emission mechanism. The flux above 100 GeV, which is brightest during the solar minimum, poses exciting opportunities for HAWC, LHAASO, IceCube, and KM3NeT.
Journal article
Unexpected dip in the solar gamma-ray spectrum
Physical Review D, Vol.98(6), 063019
25/Sep/2018
Abstract
Details
- Title
- Unexpected dip in the solar gamma-ray spectrum
- Creators
- Qing-Wen Tang (Corresponding Author) - Nanchang UniversityKenny C. Y. Ng (null) - 972WIS_INST___88Tim Linden (null) - The Ohio State UniversityBei Zhou (null) - The Ohio State UniversityJohn F. Beacom (null) - The Ohio State UniversityAnnika H. G. Peter (null) - The Ohio State University
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publication Details
- Physical Review D, Vol.98(6), 063019; 25/Sep/2018
- Number of pages
- 24
- Language
- English
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.98.063019
- Grant note
- We thank members of the Fermi-LAT Collaboration, and in particular Regina Caputo, for discussions concerning potential instrumental systematics near the solar position. We also thank Markus Ackermann, Bill Atwood, Xiaojun Bi, Keith Bechtol, Zhen Cao, Ofer Cohen, Federico Fraschetti, Hongbo Hu, and Carsten Rott for helpful discussions. Q. W. T. is supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China under Grant No. 11547029. K. C. Y. N. is supported by Croucher Fellowship and Benoziyo Fellowship. T. L., B. Z., and A. H. G. P. are supported in part by NASA Grant No. 80NSSC17K0754. B. Z. is also supported by a University Fellowship from The Ohio State University. J. F. B. is supported by (and B. Z. is partially supported by) NSF Grant No. PHY-1714479.
- Record Identifier
- 993264408203596
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