1 / 20

Ullrich Schwanke Humboldt University, Berlin, f or the H.E.S.S. Collaboration

Observations of Shell-type Supernova Remnants with H.E.S.S. Ullrich Schwanke Humboldt University, Berlin, f or the H.E.S.S. Collaboration. Overview. Introduction: supernova remnants (SNR) as possible cosmic ray sources What we now from X-rays H.E.S.S. results and interpretation

justina-day
Download Presentation

Ullrich Schwanke Humboldt University, Berlin, f or the H.E.S.S. Collaboration

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Observations of Shell-type Supernova Remnants with H.E.S.S. Ullrich Schwanke Humboldt University, Berlin, for the H.E.S.S. Collaboration

  2. Overview • Introduction: supernova remnants (SNR) as possible cosmic ray sources • What we now from X-rays • H.E.S.S. results and interpretation • RX J1713.7-3946 (“RX J1713”) - details • RX J0852.0-4622 (“Vela Junior”) – detailed 2nd paper soon to come • Summary and outlook

  3. Are SNRs the sources of cosmic rays ? • SNRs as accelerators for hadronic cosmic rays • Diffuse shock acceleration predicts power law spectrum E-2.0..2.2 • Conversion efficiency of O(10%) • Exploring SNRs using secondary x-rays and gamma-rays

  4. energy flux radio x-ray TeV energy Are SNRs the sources of cosmic rays ? • SNRs as accelerators for hadronic cosmic rays • Diffuse shock acceleration predicts power law spectrum E-2.0..2.2 • Conversion efficiency of O(10%) • Exploring SNRs using secondary x-rays and gamma-rays

  5. energy flux  radio x-ray TeV energy Are SNRs the sources of cosmic rays ? • SNRs as accelerators for hadronic cosmic rays • Diffuse shock acceleration predicts power law spectrum E-2.0..2.2 • Conversion efficiency of O(10%) • Exploring SNRs using secondary x-rays and gamma-rays electron accelerator synchrotron emission inverse Compton e

  6. hadron accelerator  0 production  0 Are SNRs the sources of cosmic rays ? • SNRs as accelerators for hadronic cosmic rays • Diffuse shock acceleration predicts power law spectrum E-2.0..2.2 • Conversion efficiency of O(10%) • Exploring SNRs using secondary x-rays and gamma-rays energy flux synchrotron emission e p radio x-ray TeV energy

  7. X-Ray Observations 2-10 keV SN 1006 (CHANDRA) Bamba et al. (2003) 0.4-0.8 keV

  8. X-Ray Observations 2-10 keV SN 1006 (CHANDRA) Bamba et al. (2003) 0.4-0.8 keV

  9. X-Ray Observations • Electrons leaving acceleration region move downstream by advection and diffusion • Synchrotron losses • Downstream size of filaments  upper limit on synchrotron loss time and lower limit on B field upstream downstream shock E. Parizot et al. (2006)

  10. H.E.S.S. TeV Observations RX J1713.7-3946 RX J0852.0-4622 Largest known TeV source 2o 0.75o

  11. H.E.S.S. TeV Observations RX J1713.7-3946 RX J0852.0-4622 Largest known TeV source 2o 0.75o

  12. RX J1713 H.E.S.S. 2004 ROSAT 1996 • Discovery in ROSAT All-Sky Survey • Mostly non-thermal X-rays • D ~ 1 kpc • CANGAROO observed TeV excess from western rim • H.E.S.S. 4-telescope obervations (33 h live-time) • Zenith angle 15-60° • Shell resolved!

  13. Correlation with X-rays • Correlation coefficient between TeV -rays (HESS) and X-rays (ASCA) is ~80% • Shocks  -rays

  14. RX J1713: Spectrum • 2003 and 2004 spectra compatible • Photon index 2.260.020.15 • Flux ~ 1 Crab • Spectrum extends up to 40 TeV  acceleration of particles up to ~100 TeV • Deviation from pure power-law at high energies

  15. Spatially Resolved Energy Spectra TeV photon index X-ray photon index H.E.S.S. 1.8 2.0 2.2 2.4 2.6 G. Cassam-Chenaï A&A 427, 199 (2004) TeV=const. difficult to understand in electron scenario

  16. Electron Scenario (1/2) energy flux energy flux SY IC SY IC E E • High B field, low electron injection  low IC level • Low B field, high electron injection  high IC level

  17. Electron Scenario (2/2) =2.2 at injection level =2.4 at injection level B=6 G B=8 G B=10 G • Simple one-zone model • Electrons and protons injected with same spectral shape; energy losses and particle escape out of the shell were considered • Need a B field of ~8 G to match flux ratio Simple electronic models do not work too well

  18. Hadron (+Electron) Scenario • Injection spectrum: power-law (=1.98) with exponential cutoff (at 120 TeV) • Injected energy 1051 erg, electron-to-proton ratio 5  10-4 • B field ~35 G, H density 1.5 cm-3

  19. Summary & Outlook • Two shell-type SNRs established as TeV -ray sources • Both sources were resolved; TeV morphology very similar to X-ray morphology • First ever spatially resolved TeV energy spectra (for RX J1713) • Observed flux is ~1 Crab, photon index ~2.2 • Question of electron or hadron acceleration remains difficult to answer (for the few objects we have) • H.E.S.S. II and GLAST will determine energy spectra in GeV domain

More Related