Back to Search Start Over

Resolving the Crab pulsar wind nebula at teraelectronvolt energies

Authors :
26598973 - Abdalla, Hassan
30588766 - Arcaro, Cornelia
28644743 - Backes, Michael
20574266 - Barnard, Monica
24420530 - Böttcher, Markus
30366755 - Chand, Tej B.
31125417 - Chandra, Sunil
26403366 - Ndiyavala, Hambeleleni
10060499 - Van der Walt, Diederick Johannes
12006653 - Venter, Christo
26594080 - Wadiasingh, Zorawar
22799133 - Schutte, Hester M.
20126999 - Seyffert, Albertus Stefanus
29092086 - Zacharias, Michael
Abdalla, H.
Arcaro, C.
Backes, M.
Barnard, M.
Böttcher, M.
Chand, T.
Chandra, S.
Ndiyavala, H.
Schutte, H.
Seyffert, A.S.
Van der Walt, D.J.
Van Rensburg, C.
Venter, C.
Wadiasingh, Z.
Zacharias, M.
H.E.S.S. Collaboration
26598973 - Abdalla, Hassan
30588766 - Arcaro, Cornelia
28644743 - Backes, Michael
20574266 - Barnard, Monica
24420530 - Böttcher, Markus
30366755 - Chand, Tej B.
31125417 - Chandra, Sunil
26403366 - Ndiyavala, Hambeleleni
10060499 - Van der Walt, Diederick Johannes
12006653 - Venter, Christo
26594080 - Wadiasingh, Zorawar
22799133 - Schutte, Hester M.
20126999 - Seyffert, Albertus Stefanus
29092086 - Zacharias, Michael
Abdalla, H.
Arcaro, C.
Backes, M.
Barnard, M.
Böttcher, M.
Chand, T.
Chandra, S.
Ndiyavala, H.
Schutte, H.
Seyffert, A.S.
Van der Walt, D.J.
Van Rensburg, C.
Venter, C.
Wadiasingh, Z.
Zacharias, M.
H.E.S.S. Collaboration
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The Crab nebula is one of the most-studied cosmic particle accelerators, shining brightly across the entire electromagnetic spectrum up to very-high-energy gamma rays1,2. It is known from observations in the radio to gamma-ray part of the spectrum that the nebula is powered by a pulsar, which converts most of its rotational energy losses into a highly relativistic outflow. This outflow powers a pulsar wind nebula, a region of up to ten light-years across, filled with relativistic electrons and positrons. These particles emit synchrotron photons in the ambient magnetic field and produce very-high-energy gamma rays by Compton up-scattering of ambient low-energy photons. Although the synchrotron morphology of the nebula is well established, it has not been known from which region the very-high-energy gamma rays are emitted3,4,5,6,7,8. Here we report that the Crab nebula has an angular extension at gamma-ray energies of 52 arcseconds (assuming a Gaussian source width), much larger than at X-ray energies. This result closes a gap in the multi-wavelength coverage of the nebula, revealing the emission region of the highest-energy gamma rays. These gamma rays enable us to probe a previously inaccessible electron and positron energy range. We find that simulations of the electromagnetic emission reproduce our measurement, providing a non-trivial test of our understanding of particle acceleration in the Crab nebula

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1153401363
Document Type :
Electronic Resource