The supernova remnant W49B as seen with H.E.S.S. and Fermi-LAT
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Date
Authors
Abdalla, H.
Barnard, M.
Böttcher, M.
Davids, I.D.
Garrigoux, T.
Ivascenko, A.
Krüger, P.P.
Pekeur, N.W.
Seyffert, A.S.
Spanier, F.
Researcher ID
24420530 - Böttcher, Markus
13146629 - Davids, Isak Delberth
26909995 - Garrigoux, Tania
24790052 - Ivascenko, Alex
11749903 - Krüger, Petrus Paulus
22050574 - Pekeur, Nicolette Whilna
20126999 - Seyffert, Albertus Stefanus
25161814 - Spanier, Felix Alexander
24922986 - Sushch, Iurii
10060499 - Van der Walt, Diederick Johannes
21106266 - Van Rensburg, Carlo
12006653 - Venter, Christo
26594080 - Wadiasingh, Zorawar
26598973 - Abdalla, Hassan
20574266 - Barnard, Monica
13146629 - Davids, Isak Delberth
26909995 - Garrigoux, Tania
24790052 - Ivascenko, Alex
11749903 - Krüger, Petrus Paulus
22050574 - Pekeur, Nicolette Whilna
20126999 - Seyffert, Albertus Stefanus
25161814 - Spanier, Felix Alexander
24922986 - Sushch, Iurii
10060499 - Van der Walt, Diederick Johannes
21106266 - Van Rensburg, Carlo
12006653 - Venter, Christo
26594080 - Wadiasingh, Zorawar
26598973 - Abdalla, Hassan
20574266 - Barnard, Monica
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EDP Sciences
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Abstract
The supernova remnant (SNR) W49B originated from a core-collapse supernova that occurred between one and four thousand years ago, and subsequently evolved into a mixed-morphology remnant, which is interacting with molecular clouds (MC). Gamma-ray observations of SNR-MC associations are a powerful tool to constrain the origin of Galactic cosmic rays, as they can probe the acceleration of hadrons through their interaction with the surrounding medium and subsequent emission of non-thermal photons. We report the detection of a γ-ray source coincident with W49B at very high energies (VHE; E > 100 GeV) with the H.E.S.S. Cherenkov telescopes together with a study of the source with five years of Fermi-LAT high-energy γ-ray (0.06–300 GeV) data. The smoothly connected, combined source spectrum, measured from 60 MeV to multi-TeV energies, shows two significant spectral breaks at 304 ± 20 MeV and 8.4−2.5+2.2 GeV; the latter is constrained by the joint fit from the two instruments. The detected spectral features are similar to those observed in several other SNR-MC associations and are found to be indicative of γ-ray emission produced through neutral-pion decay
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Abdalla, H. et al. 2018. The supernova remnant W49B as seen with H.E.S.S. and Fermi-LAT. Astronomy and astrophysics, 612: Article no A5. [https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201527843]
