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  1. Abstract

    The Galactic diffuse emission (GDE) is formed when cosmic rays leave the sources where they were accelerated, diffusively propagate in the Galactic magnetic field and interact with the interstellar medium and interstellar radiation field. GDE in γ-rays (GDE-γ) has been observed up to subpetaelectronvolt energies, although its origin may be explained by either cosmic-ray nuclei or electrons. Here we show that the γ-rays accompanying the high-energy neutrinos recently observed by the IceCube Observatory from the Galactic plane have a flux that is consistent with the GDE-γ observed by the Fermi-LAT and Tibet ASγ experiments around 1 TeV and 0.5 PeV, respectively. The consistency suggests that the diffuse γ-ray emission above ~1 TeV could be dominated by hadronuclear interactions, although a partial leptonic contribution cannot be excluded. Moreover, by comparing the fluxes of the Galactic and extragalactic diffuse emission backgrounds, we find that the neutrino luminosity of the Milky Way is one-to-two orders of magnitude lower than the average of distant galaxies. This finding implies that our Galaxy has not hosted the type of neutrino emitters that dominates the isotropic neutrino background at least in the past few tens of kiloyears.

     
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  2. Abstract

    High-energy neutrinos are detected by the IceCube Observatory in the direction of NGC 1068, the archetypical type II Seyfert galaxy. The neutrino flux, surprisingly, is more than an order of magnitude higher than theγ-ray upper limits at measured TeV energy, posing tight constraints on the physical conditions of a neutrino production site. We report an analysis of the submillimeter, mid-infrared, and ultraviolet observations of the central 50 pc of NGC 1068 and suggest that the inner dusty torus and the region where the jet interacts with the surrounding interstellar medium (ISM) may be a potential neutrino production site. Based on radiation and magnetic field properties derived from observations, we calculate the electromagnetic cascade of theγ-rays accompanying the neutrinos. When injecting protons with a hard spectrum, our model may explain the observed neutrino flux above ∼10 TeV. It predicts a unique sub-TeVγ-ray component, which could be identified by a future observation. Jet–ISM interactions are commonly observed in the proximity of jets of both supermassive and stellar-mass black holes. Our results imply that such interaction regions could beγ-ray-obscured neutrino production sites, which are needed to explain the IceCube diffuse neutrino flux.

     
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  3. Abstract The diffuse flux of cosmic neutrinos has been measured by the IceCube Observatory from TeV to PeV energies. We show that an improved characterization of this flux at lower energies, TeV and sub-TeV, reveals important information on the nature of the astrophysical neutrino sources in a model-independent way. Most significantly, it could confirm the present indications that neutrinos originate in cosmic environments that are optically thick to GeV–TeV γ -rays. This conclusion will become inevitable if an uninterrupted or even steeper neutrino power law is observed in the TeV region. In such γ -ray-obscured sources, the γ -rays that inevitably accompany cosmic neutrinos will cascade down to MeV–GeV energies. The requirement that the cascaded γ -ray flux accompanying cosmic neutrinos should not exceed the observed diffuse γ -ray background puts constraints on the peak energy and density of the radiation fields in the sources. Our calculations inspired by the existing data suggest that a fraction of the observed diffuse MeV–GeV γ -ray background may be contributed by neutrino sources with intense radiation fields that obscure the high-energy γ -ray emission accompanying the neutrinos. 
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  4. Abstract

    The IceCube project transformed a cubic kilometer of transparent natural Antarctic ice into a Cherenkov detector. It discovered PeV‐energy neutrinos originating beyond our galaxy with an energy flux that is comparable to that of GeV‐energy gamma rays and EeV‐energy cosmic rays. These neutrinos provide the only unobstructed view of the cosmic accelerators that power the highest energy radiation reaching us from the universe. The results from IceCube's first decade of operations, foremost the measurement of the diffuse neutrino flux from the universe using multiple techniques is reviewed. The multimessenger data that identified the supermassive black hole TXS 0506+056 as a source of cosmic neutrinos is subsequently reviewed and attention is drawn to accumulating indications that cosmic neutrinos are associated with gamma‐ray‐obscured active galaxies, that is, the energy in gamma rays that accompanies cosmic neutrinos emerges at MeV energies, or below. Reaching beyond 10 PeV energy, cosmic neutrinos provide a natural beam to study neutrinos themselves.

     
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