, constructed from photons detected by LAT
Pulsar discovery The first major discovery came when the space telescope detected a
pulsar in the CTA 1
supernova remnant that appeared to emit radiation in the
gamma ray bands only, the first of its kind. This new pulsar sweeps the Earth every 316.86 milliseconds and is about 4,600
light-years away.
Greatest gamma-ray burst energy release In September 2008, the gamma-ray burst
GRB 080916C in the constellation
Carina was recorded by the Fermi telescope. This burst is notable as having "the largest apparent energy release yet measured". The explosion had the power of about 9,000 ordinary supernovae, and the
relativistic jet of material ejected in the blast must have moved at a minimum of 99.9999% the
speed of light. Overall, GRB 080916C had "the greatest total energy, the fastest motions, and the highest initial-energy emissions" ever seen.
Galactic Center gamma ray excess In 2009, a surplus of gamma rays from a spherical region around the
Galactic Center of the Milky Way was found in data from the Fermi telescope. This is now known as the
Galactic Center GeV excess. The source of this surplus is not known. Suggestions include self-annihilation of
dark matter or a population of
pulsars. Cosmic rays and supernova remnants In February 2010, it was announced that Fermi-LAT had determined that
supernova remnants act as enormous accelerators for
cosmic particles. This determination fulfills one of the stated missions for this project.
Background gamma ray sources In March 2010 it was announced that
active galactic nuclei are not responsible for most gamma-ray background radiation. Though active galactic nuclei do produce some of the gamma-ray radiation detected here on Earth, less than 30% originates from these sources. The search now is to locate the sources for the remaining 70% or so of all gamma-rays detected. Possibilities include
star forming galaxies,
galactic mergers, and yet-to-be explained dark matter
interactions.
Milky Way Gamma- and X-ray emitting Fermi bubbles In November 2010, it was announced that
two gamma-ray and X-ray emitting bubbles were detected around our galaxy, the Milky Way. The bubbles, named
Fermi bubbles, extend about 25 thousand
light-years distant above and below the galactic center.
Terrestrial gamma-ray flash observations Fermi telescope has observed and detected numerous
terrestrial gamma-ray flashes and discovered that such flashes can produce 100 trillion positrons, far more than scientists had previously expected.
GRB 130427A light On 27 April 2013, Fermi detected
GRB 130427A, a
gamma-ray burst with one of the highest energy outputs yet recorded. This included detection of a gamma-ray over 94 billion electron volts (GeV).
GRB coincident with gravitational wave event GW150914 Fermi reported that its GBM instrument detected a weak gamma-ray burst above 50 keV, starting 0.4 seconds after the
LIGO event and with a positional uncertainty region overlapping that of the LIGO observation. The Fermi team calculated the odds of such an event being the result of a coincidence or noise at 0.22%. However, observations from the
INTEGRAL telescope's all-sky SPI-ACS instrument indicated that any energy emission in gamma-rays and hard X-rays from the event was less than one millionth of the energy emitted as gravitational waves, concluding that "this limit excludes the possibility that the event is associated with substantial gamma-ray radiation, directed towards the observer." If the signal observed by the Fermi GBM was associated with GW150914, SPI-ACS would have detected it with a significance of 15 sigma above the background. The
AGILE space telescope also did not detect a gamma-ray counterpart of the event. A follow-up analysis of the Fermi report by an independent group, released in June 2016, purported to identify statistical flaws in the initial analysis, concluding that the observation was consistent with a statistical fluctuation or an Earth albedo transient on a 1-second timescale. A rebuttal of this follow-up analysis, however, pointed out that the independent group misrepresented the analysis of the original Fermi GBM Team paper and therefore misconstrued the results of the original analysis. The rebuttal reaffirmed that the false coincidence probability is calculated empirically and is not refuted by the independent analysis. In October 2018, astronomers reported that
GRB 150101B, 1.7 billion light years away from Earth, may be analogous to the historic
GW170817. It was detected on 1 January 2015 at 15:23:35 UT by the Gamma-ray Burst Monitor on board the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope, along with detections by the
Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) on board the
Swift Observatory Satellite. Black hole mergers of the type thought to have produced the gravitational wave event are not expected to produce gamma-ray bursts, as stellar-mass black hole binaries are not expected to have large amounts of orbiting matter.
Avi Loeb has theorised that if a massive star is rapidly rotating, the centrifugal force produced during its collapse will lead to the formation of a rotating bar that breaks into two dense clumps of matter with a dumbbell configuration that becomes a black hole binary, and at the end of the star's collapse it triggers a gamma-ray burst. Loeb suggests that the 0.4 second delay is the time it took the gamma-ray burst to cross the star, relative to the gravitational waves.
GRB 170817A signals a multi-messenger transient On 17 August 2017, Fermi Gamma-Ray Burst Monitor software detected, classified, and localized a gamma-ray burst which was later designated as GRB 170817A. Six minutes later, a single detector at Hanford LIGO registered a gravitational-wave candidate which was consistent with a binary
neutron star merger, occurring 2 seconds before the GRB 170817A event. This observation was "the first joint detection of
gravitational and
electromagnetic radiation from a single source". == Instruments ==