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Current measurements of the $gamma$-ray Fermi bubbles (FB) are based on model-dependent tracers, carry substantial systematic uncertainties, and are at some tension with each other. We show that gradient filters pick out the FB edges, which are found to smoothly connect to the bipolar X-ray structure emanating from the Galactic center, thus supporting the interpretation of the FBs as a Galactic-scale phenomenon. The sharp edges facilitate a direct, model-free measurement of the peripheral FB spectrum. The result is strikingly similar to the full FB-integrated spectrum, softened by a power law of index $etasimeq (0.2mbox{--}0.3)$. This is naturally explained, in both hadronic and leptonic models, if cosmic rays are injected at the edge, and diffuse away preferentially at higher energies $E$. The inferred, averaged diffusion function in the (more plausible) leptonic model, $D(E)simeq 10^{29.5}(E/10mbox{ GeV})^{0.48pm0.02}mbox{ cm}^2mbox{ s}^{-1}$, is consistent with estimates for Kraichnan-like turbulence. Our results, in particular the minute spatial variations in $eta$, indicate that the FB edge is a strong, Mach $gtrsim5$, forward shock.
The bipolar, nonthermal, high-latitude lobes known as the Fermi bubbles (FBs) are thought to originate from a massive energy release near the Galactic centre (GC). We constrain the FB engine and the circumgalactic medium (CGM) by analytically and num
We report new Chandra hard X-ray ($>2rm~keV$) and JVLA C-band observations of the nuclear superbubble of NGC 3079, an analog of the Fermi bubble in our Milky Way. We detect extended hard X-ray emission on the SW side of the galactic nucleus with cohe
Almost 10 yr of $gamma$-ray observations with the Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) have revealed extreme $gamma$-ray outbursts from flat spectrum radio quasars (FSRQs), temporarily making these objects the brightest $gamma$-ray emitters in the sky. Y
We analyse the origin of the gamma-ray flux from the Fermi Bubbles (FBs) in the framework of the hadronic model in which gamma-rays are produced by collisions of relativistic protons with the protons of background plasma in the Galactic halo. It is a
The propagation of charged particles, including cosmic rays, in a partially ordered magnetic field is characterized by a diffusion tensor whose components depend on the particles Larmor radius $R_L$ and the degree of order in the magnetic field. Most