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JOURNALS // Uspekhi Fizicheskikh Nauk // Archive

UFN, 1979 Volume 128, Number 2, Pages 313–343 (Mi ufn9340)

This article is cited in 1 paper

REVIEWS OF TOPICAL PROBLEMS

Gamma rays and the structure of the Galaxy

A. M. Gal'pera, B. I. Luchkova, O. F. Prilutskiib

a Moscow Engineering Physics Institute
b Space Research Institute, USSR Academy of Sciences, Moscow

Abstract: The observations and theoretical interpretations of galactic $\gamma$ rays in the energy region 10$^7$–10$^{10}$ eV are reviewed. Galactic $\gamma$ rays consist of a diffuse component and radiation from discrete sources. The diffuse component, which is formed as the result of interaction of cosmic rays with interstellar gas, reflects the large-scale structure of the Galaxy. Recent observations have revealed the existence of a belt of molecular hydrogen at a distance 4–8 kpc from the Galactic Center and indicate a nonuniformity of the distribution of cosmic rays over the disk and in the halo of the Galaxy. Information on the small-scale structure of the Galaxy in the $\gamma$ region is obtained from the discrete $\gamma$-ray sources, of which more than twenty have now been observed. The best known of these are the pulsars in the Crab Nebula, Vela-X, Cygnus X-3, and the region of the Galactic Center. Possible mechanisms for the $\gamma$ radiation of discrete sources are discussed.

UDC: 523.854 + 539.122

PACS: 98.50.Eb, 98.70.Qy, 98.40.-p

DOI: 10.3367/UFNr.0128.197906d.0313


 English version:
Physics–Uspekhi, 1979, 22:6, 456–473


© Steklov Math. Inst. of RAS, 2026