Discovery of very-high-energy γ-ray emission from the vicinity of PSR J1913+1011 with HESS

Abstract

The HESS experiment, an array of four Imaging Atmospheric Cherenkov Telescopes with high sensitivity and large field-of-view, has been used to search for emitters of very-high-energy (VHE, >100 GeV) γ-rays along the Galactic plane, covering the region 30° < l < 60°, 280° < l < 330°, and -3° < b < 3°. In this continuation of the HESS Galactic Plane Scan, a new extended VHE γ-ray source was discovered at α2000=19h12m49s, δ2000=+10°09’06” (HESS J1912+101). Its integral flux between 1-10 TeV is ~10% of the Crab Nebula flux in the same energy range. The measured energy spectrum can be described by a power law dN/dE ∼ E with a photon index Γ = 2.7 ± 0.2stat± 0.3sys. HESS J1912+101 is plausibly associated with the high spin-down luminosity pulsar PSR J1913+1011. We also discuss associations with an as yet unconfirmed SNR candidate proposed from low frequency radio observation and/or with molecular clouds found in 13CO data.

Auxiliary informations

Spectrum

E dN/dE error_up error_low
(TeV) (1/TeV cm2 s)
0.872 3.82e-12 1.21e-12 1.18e-12
1.76 1.02e-12 1.73e-13 1.69e-13
3.75 8.12e-14 3.32e-14 3.21e-14
8.03 1.85e-14 8.27e-15 7.89e-15
24.6 8.27e-16 (2sigma UL)

FITS images

Figure 1 (top, left)
[excess]
[significance]