The Animated Gamma-ray Sky Revealed by the
Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope
Isabelle
Grenier
University
Paris Diderot and CEA Saclay
The Fermi
Gamma-ray Space Telescope has been observing the sky in gamma-rays since August
2008. In addition to breakthrough capabilities in energy coverage (20
MeV-300 GeV) and angular resolution, the wide field
of view of the Large Area Telescope enables observations of 20% of the sky at
any instant, and of the whole sky every three hours. It has revealed a very
animated sky with bright gamma-ray bursts flashing and vanishing in minutes,
powerful active galactic nuclei flaring over hours and days, many pulsars
twinkling in the Milky Way, and X-ray binaries shimmering along their orbit.
Most of these variable sources had not been seen by the Fermi predecessor,
EGRET, and the wealth of new data already brings important clues to the origin
of the high-energy emission and particles powered by the compact objects. The
telescope also brings crisp images of the bright gamma-ray emission produced by
cosmic-ray interactions in the interstellar medium, thus allowing to measure the cosmic nuclei and electron spectra across the
Galaxy, to weigh interstellar clouds, in particular in the dark-gas phase. The
telescope sensitivity at high energy will soon provide useful constraints on
dark-matter annihilations in a variety of environments. I will review the
current results and future prospects of the Fermi mission.