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The Fermi Bubbles are enigmatic gamma-ray features of the Galactic bulge. Both putative activity (within $sim$ few $times$ Myr) connected to the Galactic center super-massive black hole and, alternatively, nuclear star formation have been claimed as the energising source of the Bubbles. Likewise, both inverse-Compton emission by non-thermal electrons (`leptonic models) and collisions between non-thermal protons and gas (`hadronic models) have been advanced as the process supplying the Bubbles gamma -ray emission. An issue for any steady state hadronic model is that the very low density of the Bubbles plasma seems to require that they accumulate protons over a multi-Gyr timescale, much longer than other natural timescales occurring in the problem. Here we present a hadronic model where the timescale for generating the Bubbles hadronic gamma -ray emission is $sim$ few $times 10^8$ years. Our model invokes collapse of the Bubbles thermally-unstable plasma, leading to an accumulation of cosmic rays and magnetic field into localised, warm ($sim 10^4$ K), and likely filamentary condensations of higher density gas. Under the condition that these filaments are supported by non-thermal pressure, we can predict the hadronic emission from the Bubbles to be $L_gamma simeq 2 times 10^{37}$ erg/s $ dot{M}_mathrm{in}/(0.1 M_{Sun}/$ year $) T_mathrm{FB}^2/(3.5 times 10^7 K) ^2 M_{fil}/M_{pls}$ ; precisely their observed luminosity (normalizing to the star-formation-driven mass flux into the Bubbles and their measured plasma temperature and adopting the further result that the mass in the filaments, $M_{fil}$ is approximately equal to that of the Bubbles plasma, $M_{pls}$).
We report the discovery of high-energy (E>100 MeV) gamma-ray emission from NGC 1275, a giant elliptical galaxy lying at the center of the Perseus cluster of galaxies, based on observations made with the Large Area Telescope (LAT) of the Fermi Gamma r
Fermi LAT has discovered two extended gamma-ray bubbles above and below the galactic plane. We propose that their origin is due to the energy release in the Galactic center (GC) as a result of quasi-periodic star accretion onto the central black hole
We examine 288 GRBs detected by the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescopes Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM) that fell within the field-of-view of Fermis Large Area Telescope (LAT) during the first 2.5 years of observations, which showed no evidence for emissi
Hadronic gamma-ray emission from supernova remnants (SNRs) is an important tool to test shock acceleration of cosmic ray protons. Tycho is one of nearly a dozen Galactic SNRs which are suggested to emit hadronic gamma-ray emission. Among them, howeve
We show the existence of a statistically significant, robust detection of a gamma-ray source in the Milky Way Galactic Center that is consistent with a spatially extended signal using about 4 years of Fermi-LAT data. The gamma-ray flux is consistent