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- Upper limits to the SN1006 multi-TeV gamma-ray flux from HESS observations doi link

Auteur(s): Aharonian F., G. Akhperjanian A., Berghaus P., Bussons Gordo J., Chounet L.-M., Degrange B., Djannati-Ataï A., Dubus G., Espigat P., Feinstein F., Fleury P., Fontaine G., Gallant Y., Giebels B., Lemière A., Lemoine M., Leroy N., Marcowith A., De Naurois M., Ouchrif M., Pita S., Punch M., Raux J., Redondo I., Rolland L., Tavernet J.-P., Théoret C.G., Tluczykont M., Vasileiadis G., Vincent P.

(Article) Publié: Astronomy & Astrophysics, vol. 437 p.135-139 (2005)
Texte intégral en Openaccess : arxiv


Ref HAL: in2p3-00024436_v1
Ref Arxiv: astro-ph/0502239
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20042522
Ref. & Cit.: NASA ADS
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
41 citations
Résumé:

Observations of the shell-type supernova remnant SN1006 have been carried out with the HESS system of Cherenkov telescopes during 2003 (18.2 h with two operating telescopes) and 2004 (6.3 h with all four telescopes). No evidence for TeV $\gamma$-ray emission from any compact or extended region associated with the remnant is seen and resulting upper limits at the 99.9% confidence level are up to a factor 10 lower than previously-published fluxes from CANGAROO. For SN1006 at its current epoch of evolution we define limits for a number of important global parameters. Upper limits on the $\gamma$-ray luminosity (for E = 0.26 to 10 TeV, distance d = 2 kpc) of $L_\gamma < 1.7$ $\times$ 1033 erg s-1, and the total energy in corresponding accelerated protons, $W_{\rm p}<1.6$ $\times$ 1050 erg are estimated (for proton energies $E_{\rm p} \sim 1.5$ to 60 TeV and assuming the lowest value n=0.05 cm-3 of the ambient target density discussed in literature). Extending this estimate to cover the range of proton energies observed in the cosmic ray spectrum up to the knee (we take here $E_{\rm p} \sim$ 1 GeV to 3 PeV, assuming a differential particle index -2) gives $W_{\rm p}<6.3$ $\times$ 1050 erg. A lower limit on the post-shock magnetic field of $B>25~\mu$G results when considering the synchrotron/inverse-Compton framework for the observed X-ray flux and $\gamma$-ray upper limits.