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Emission of AGNs and neutral pion decay - are the two most natural mechanisms, that could make a galaxy cluster be a source of gamma-rays in the GeV regime. We revisited this problem by using 52.5-month FERMI-LAT data above 10 GeV and stacking 55 clusters from the HIFLUGS sample of the X-ray brightest clusters. The choice of >10 GeV photons is optimal from the point of view of angular resolution, while the sample selection optimizes the chances of detecting signatures of the neutral pion decay, arising from hadronic interactions of relativistic protons with an intra-cluster medium, which scale with the X-ray flux. In the stacked data we detected a signal for the central 0.25 deg circle at the level of 4.3 sigma. An evidence for a spatial extent of the signal is marginal. A subsample of cool-core clusters has higher count rate 1.9+/-0.3 per cluster compared to the subsample of non-cool core clusters 1.3+/-0.2. Several independent arguments suggest that the contribution of AGNs to the observed signal is substantial if not dominant. No strong support for the large contribution of pion decay was found. In terms of a limit on the relativistic protons energy density, we got an upper limit of ~1.5% relative to the gas thermal energy density, provided that the spectrum of relativistic protons is hard (s=4.1 in dN/dp=p^-s). This estimate assumes that relativistic and thermal components are mixed. For softer spectra the limits are weaker.
The $gamma$-ray and neutrino emissions from dark matter (DM) annihilation in galaxy clusters are studied. After about one year operation of Fermi-LAT, several nearby clusters are reported with stringent upper limits of GeV $gamma$-ray emission. We us
A new analysis of the dataset from the Pierre Auger Observatory provides evidence for anisotropy in the arrival directions of ultra-high-energy cosmic rays on an intermediate angular scale, which is indicative of excess arrivals from strong, nearby s
The next generation of neutrino and gamma-ray detectors should provide new insights into the creation and propagation of high-energy protons within galaxy clusters, probing both the particle physics of cosmic rays interacting with the background medi
Current theories predict relativistic hadronic particle populations in clusters of galaxies in addition to the already observed relativistic leptons. In these scenarios hadronic interactions give rise to neutral pions which decay into $gamma$ rays, t
Galaxy clusters are predicted to produce gamma-rays through cosmic ray interactions and/or dark matter annihilation, potentially detectable by the Fermi Large Area Telescope (Fermi-LAT). We present a new, independent stacking analysis of Fermi-LAT ph