Discovery of Very High Energy γ-Ray Emission from Centaurus A with H.E.S.S.

Abstract

We report the discovery of faint very high energy (VHE; E > 100 GeV) γ-ray emission from the radio galaxy Centaurus A in observations performed with the High Energy Stereoscopic System (H.E.S.S.) experiment, an imaging atmospheric Cherenkov telescope array consisting of four telescopes located in Namibia. Centaurus A has been observed for more than 120 hr. A signal with a statistical significance of 5.0σ is detected from the region including the radio core and the inner kpc jets. The integral flux above an energy threshold of ∼250 GeV is measured to be 0.8% of the flux of the Crab Nebula (apparent luminosity: L(>250 GeV) ≈2.6 × 1039 erg s−1, adopting a distance of 3.8 Mpc). The spectrum can be described by a power law with a photon index of 2.7 ± 0.5stat ± 0.2sys. No significant flux variability is detected in the data set. However, the low flux only allows detection of variability on the timescale of days to flux increments above a factor of ∼15–20 (3σ and 4σ, respectively). The discovery of VHE γ-ray emission from Centaurus A reveals particle acceleration in the source to >TeV energies and, together with M 87, establishes radio galaxies as a class of VHE emitters.

Auxiliary informations

H.E.S.S. data points for Figure 4 (Time-Average VHE Spectrum)

Mean Energy Flux dN/dE Flux Error dN/dE
[TeV] [/TeV cm^2 s] [/TeV cm^2 s]
0.3681 4.94779e-12 2.47701e-12
0.6140 1.12016e-12 3.08467e-13
1.0242 1.39044e-13 9.10046e-14
1.7085 5.11891e-14 3.19156e-14
2.8500 2.25003e-14 1.25453e-14
4.7541 7.93888e-15 5.17640e-15

Remarks: Statistical errors only.