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Research PaperResearchia:202606.10017

MeV-GeV Gamma-Ray Astrophysics in the Multimessenger Era

Alessandro De Angelis

Abstract

Gamma-ray astrophysics probes the most extreme particle accelerators and explosive transients in the Universe. From pioneering theoretical predictions in the 1950s and the first space-borne detections in the 1960s, mostly exploring the sub-MeV region, the field has evolved into a mature, multi-decade enterprise that spans nine orders of magnitude in photon energy up to PeV energies and interfaces naturally with neutrino and gravitational-wave astronomy. Yet the energy range from a few hundred ke...

Submitted: June 10, 2026Subjects: Physics; Physics

Description / Details

Gamma-ray astrophysics probes the most extreme particle accelerators and explosive transients in the Universe. From pioneering theoretical predictions in the 1950s and the first space-borne detections in the 1960s, mostly exploring the sub-MeV region, the field has evolved into a mature, multi-decade enterprise that spans nine orders of magnitude in photon energy up to PeV energies and interfaces naturally with neutrino and gravitational-wave astronomy. Yet the energy range from a few hundred keV to a few GeV -- the "MeV gap", constraining progress on nucleosynthesis, positron annihilation, transient physics, dark-matter signatures, and electromagnetic counterparts to high-energy neutrinos and gravitational waves - remains sensitivity-limited. In this paper, we survey the scientific motivations for gamma-ray astrophysics, sketch a concise history from the first ideas to key milestones in space- and ground- based gamma-ray astronomy, and discuss programmatic attempts to close the MeV gap.


Source: arXiv:2606.10561v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2606.10561v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2606.10561v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2606.10561v1

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Date:
Jun 10, 2026
Topic:
Physics
Area:
Physics
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