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HESS J1943+213: a candidate extreme BL Lacertae object

Authors :
Collaboration, H. E. S. S.
Abramowski, A.
Acero, F.
Aharonian, F.
Akhperjanian, A. G.
Anton, G.
Balzer, A.
Barnacka, A.
de Almeida, U. Barres
Bazer-Bachi, A. R.
Becherini, Y.
Becker, J.
Behera, B.
Bernlöhr, K.
Bochow, A.
Boisson, C.
Bolmont, J.
Bordas, P.
Borrel, V.
Brucker, J.
Brun, F.
Brun, P.
Bulik, T.
Büsching, I.
Carrigan, S.
Casanova, S.
Cerruti, M.
Chadwick, P. M.
Charbonnier, A.
Chaves, R. C. G.
Cheesebrough, A.
Chounet, L. -M.
Clapson, A. C.
Coignet, G.
Colom, P.
Conrad, J.
Dalton, M.
Daniel, M. K.
Davids, I. D.
Degrange, B.
Deil, C.
Dickinson, H. J.
Djannati-Ataï, A.
Domainko, W.
Drury, L. O'C.
Dubois, F.
Dubus, G.
Dyks, J.
Dyrda, M.
Egberts, K.
Eger, P.
Espigat, P.
Fallon, L.
Farnier, C.
Fegan, S.
Feinstein, F.
Fernandes, M. V.
Fiasson, A.
Fontaine, G.
Förster, A.
Füßling, M.
Gallant, Y. A.
Gast, H.
Gérard, L.
Gerbig, D.
Giebels, B.
Glicenstein, J. F.
Glück, B.
Goret, P.
Göring, D.
Häffner, S.
Hague, J. D.
Hampf, D.
Hauser, M.
Heinz, S.
Heinzelmann, G.
Henri, G.
Hermann, G.
Hinton, J. A.
Hoffmann, A.
Hofmann, W.
Hofverberg, P.
Holler, M.
Horns, D.
Jacholkowska, A.
de Jager, O. C.
Jahn, C.
Jamrozy, M.
Jung, I.
Kastendieck, M. A.
Katarzyński, K.
Katz, U.
Kaufmann, S.
Keogh, D.
Khangulyan, D.
Khélifi, B.
Klochkov, D.
Kluźniak, W.
Kneiske, T.
Komin, Nu.
Kosack, K.
Kossakowski, R.
Laffon, H.
Lamanna, G.
Lennarz, D.
Lohse, T.
Lopatin, A.
Lu, C. -C.
Marandon, V.
Marcowith, A.
Masbou, J.
Maurin, D.
Maxted, N.
McComb, T. J. L.
Medina, M. C.
Méhault, J.
Nguyen, N.
Moderski, R.
Moulin, E.
Naumann, C. L.
Naumann-Godo, M.
de Naurois, M.
Nedbal, D.
Nekrassov, D.
Nicholas, B.
Niemiec, J.
Nolan, S. J.
Ohm, S.
Olive, J-F.
Wilhelmi, E. de Oña
Opitz, B.
Ostrowski, M.
Panter, M.
Arribas, M. Paz
Pedaletti, G.
Pelletier, G.
Petrucci, P. -O.
Pita, S.
Pühlhofer, G.
Punch, M.
Quirrenbach, A.
Raue, M.
Rayner, S. M.
Reimer, A.
Reimer, O.
Renaud, M.
Reyes, R. de los
Rieger, F.
Ripken, J.
Rob, L.
Rosier-Lees, S.
Rowell, G.
Rudak, B.
Rulten, C. B.
Ruppel, J.
Ryde, F.
Sahakian, V.
Santangelo, A.
Schlickeiser, R.
Schöck, F. M.
Schönwald, A.
Schulz, A.
Schwanke, U.
Schwarzburg, S.
Schwemmer, S.
Shalchi, A.
Sikora, M.
Skilton, J. L.
Sol, H.
Spengler, G.
Stawarz, Ł.
Steenkamp, R.
Stegmann, C.
Stinzing, F.
Stycz, K.
Sushch, I.
Szostek, A.
Tavernet, J. -P.
Terrier, R.
Tibolla, O.
Tluczykont, M.
Valerius, K.
van Eldik, C.
Vasileiadis, G.
Venter, C.
Vialle, J. P.
Viana, A.
Vincent, P.
Vivier, M.
Völk, H. J.
Volpe, F.
Vorobiov, S.
Vorster, M.
Wagner, S. J.
Ward, M.
Wierzcholska, A.
Zajczyk, A.
Zdziarski, A. A.
Zech, A.
Zechlin, H. -S.
Burnett, T. H.
Hill, A. B.
Source :
A&A 529, A49 (2011)
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

We report on a newly detected point-like source, HESS J1943+213 located in the Galactic plane. This source coincides with an unidentified hard X-ray source IGR J19443+2117, which was proposed to have radio and infrared counterparts. HESS J1943+213 is detected at the significance level of 7.9 \sigma (post-trials) at RA(J2000)=19h 43m 55s +- 1s (stat) +- 1s (sys), DEC(J2000) = +21deg 18' 8" +- 17" (stat) +- 20" (sys). The source has a soft spectrum with photon index Gamma = 3.1 +- 0.3 (stat) +- 0.2 (sys) and a flux above 470 GeV of 1.3 +- 0.2 (stat) +- 0.3 (sys) x 10^{-12} cm^{-2} s^{-1}. There is no Fermi/LAT counterpart down to a flux limit of 6 x 10^{-9} cm^{-2} s^{-1} in the 0.1-100 GeV energy range (95% confidence upper limit calculated for an assumed power-law model with a photon index Gamma=2.0). The data from radio to VHE gamma-rays do not show any significant variability. We combine new H.E.S.S., Fermi/LAT and Nancay Radio Telescope observations with pre-existing non-simultaneous multi-wavelength observations of IGR J19443+2117 and discuss the likely source associations as well as the interpretation as an active galactic nucleus, a gamma-ray binary or a pulsar wind nebula. The lack of a massive stellar counterpart disfavors the binary hypothesis, while the soft VHE spectrum would be very unusual in case of a pulsar wind nebula. In addition, the distance estimates for Galactic counterparts places them outside of the Milky Way. All available observations favor an interpretation as an extreme, high-frequency peaked BL Lac object with a redshift z>0.14. This would be the first time a blazar is detected serendipitously from ground-based VHE observations, and the first VHE AGN detected in the Galactic Plane.<br />Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, in press at A&A

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
A&A 529, A49 (2011)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1103.0763
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201116545