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Fermi All-sky Movie Shows Flaring, Fading Blazars

This all-sky movie shows counts of gamma rays with energies greater than 300 million electron volts from August 4 to October 30, 2008, detected by Fermi’s Large Area Telescope. Brighter colors indicate brighter gamma-ray sources. The circles show the northern (left) and southern galactic sky. Their edges lie along the plane of our galaxy, the Milky Way.

Because this is an unusual view of the sky, the movies first overlay the stars and establish the locations of well- known constellations: Ursa Major (which includes the Big Dipper), Boötes, and Virgo in the northern galactic map; Cetus, Aries, and Pegasus in the southern galactic map. Notable gamma-ray sources include the sun (moving through the northern sky), the gamma-ray-only pulsar PSR J1836+5925 -- a member of a new pulsar class discovered by Fermi – and numerous blazars (active galaxies). The blazars 3C 273, AO 0235+164, and PKS 1502+106 are highlighted.


This all-sky movie shows Fermi LAT counts of gamma rays with energies greater than 300 million electron volts from August 4 to October 30, 2008. Brighter colors indicate brighter gamma-ray sources. The circles show the northern (left) and southern galactic sky. Their edges lie along the plane of our galaxy, the Milky Way.    This all-sky movie shows Fermi LAT counts of gamma rays with energies greater than 300 million electron volts from August 4 to October 30, 2008. Brighter colors indicate brighter gamma-ray sources. The circles show the northern (left) and southern galactic sky. Their edges lie along the plane of our galaxy, the Milky Way.
Duration: 3.8 minutes
Available formats:
  640x360 (29.97 fps) MPEG-4   41 MB
  512x288 (29.97 fps) MPEG-1   35 MB
  320x240 (29.97 fps) MPEG-4   5 MB
  1280x720 (30 fps) QT         139 MB
  1280x720 (59.94 fps) QT         3 GB
  320x180     PNG           176 KB
  160x80       PNG           46 KB
  80x40         PNG           12 KB
How to play our movies


This all-sky movie shows Fermi LAT counts of gamma rays with energies greater than 300 million electron volts from August 4 to October 30, 2008. Brighter colors indicate brighter gamma-ray sources. The circle shows the northern galactic sky. Its edges lie along the plane of our galaxy, the Milky Way.    This all-sky movie shows Fermi LAT counts of gamma rays with energies greater than 300 million electron volts from August 4 to October 30, 2008. Brighter colors indicate brighter gamma-ray sources. The circle shows the northern galactic sky. Its edges lie along the plane of our galaxy, the Milky Way.
Duration: 2.8 minutes
Available formats:
  640x360 (29.97 fps) MPEG-4   30 MB
  512x288 (29.97 fps) MPEG-1   26 MB
  320x240 (29.97 fps) MPEG-4   3 MB
  1280x720 (30 fps) QT         102 MB
  1280x720 (59.94 fps) QT         2 GB
  320x180     PNG           139 KB
How to play our movies


This all-sky movie shows Fermi LAT counts of gamma rays with energies greater than 300 million electron volts from August 4 to October 30, 2008. Brighter colors indicate brighter gamma-ray sources. The circle shows the southern galactic sky. Its edges lie along the plane of our galaxy, the Milky Way.    This all-sky movie shows Fermi LAT counts of gamma rays with energies greater than 300 million electron volts from August 4 to October 30, 2008. Brighter colors indicate brighter gamma-ray sources. The circle shows the southern galactic sky. Its edges lie along the plane of our galaxy, the Milky Way.
Duration: 1.5 minutes
Available formats:
  640x360 (29.97 fps) MPEG-4   16 MB
  512x288 (29.97 fps) MPEG-1   14 MB
  320x240 (29.97 fps) MPEG-4   3 MB
  1280x720 (30 fps) QT         57 MB
  1280x720 (59.94 fps) QT         1 GB
  320x180     PNG           140 KB
How to play our movies


Looped Fermi all-sky map in the northern galactic sky.    Looped Fermi all-sky map in the northern galactic sky.
Duration: 29.0 seconds
Available formats:
  1081x1080 Frames (Northern Hemisphere)
  640x360 (29.97 fps) MPEG-4   5 MB
  512x288 (29.97 fps) MPEG-1   4 MB
  320x240 (29.97 fps) MPEG-4   898 KB
  1280x720 (59.94 fps) QT         477 MB
  320x180     PNG           137 KB
How to play our movies


Looped Fermi all-sky map in the southern galactic sky.    Looped Fermi all-sky map in the southern galactic sky.
Duration: 29.0 seconds
Available formats:
  1081x1080 Frames (Southern Hemisphere)
  640x360 (29.97 fps) MPEG-4   5 MB
  512x288 (29.97 fps) MPEG-1   4 MB
  320x240 (29.97 fps) MPEG-4   914 KB
  1280x720 (59.94 fps) QT         482 MB
  320x180     PNG           138 KB
How to play our movies

Animation Number:10407
Completed:2009-04-01
Animators:Jean Ballet (CEA Saclay) (Lead)
 Cruz DeWilde (Avant Gravity)
 Walt Feimer (HTSI)
Producer:Stefanie Misztal (UMBC)
Scientists:Jean Ballet (CEA Saclay)
 Elizabeth Hays (NASA/GSFC)
 Steven Ritz (NASA/GSFC)
Writer:Francis Reddy (SPSYS)
Platform/Sensor/Data Set:Fermi/LAT
Keywords:
SVS >> Gamma Ray
SVS >> HDTV
SVS >> Gamma Ray Burst
SVS >> Astrophysics
SVS >> Universe
SVS >> Pulsar
SVS >> GLAST
SVS >> Constellation
SVS >> Gamma Ray Observatory
SVS >> Fermi
More Information on this topic available at:
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/GLAST/news/flare_fade.html
 
 
Please give credit for this item to
NASA/DOE/Fermi LAT Collaboration


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