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MPI Kernphysik, Heidelberg Humboldt Univ. Berlin Ruhr-Univ. Bochum Univ. Hamburg LSW Heidelberg Univ. Tübingen Ecole Polytechnique, Palaiseau APC Paris Univ. Paris VI-VII Paris Observatory, Meudon LAPP Annecy LAOG Grenoble LPTA Montpellier CEA Saclay CESR Toulouse Durham Univ. Dublin Inst. for Adv. Studies Charles Univ., Prague Yerewan Physics Inst. North-West Univ., Potchefstroom Univ. of Namibia, Windhoek VHE Gamma Ray Astronomy with the H igh E nergy S tereoscopic S ystem: Highlights W. Hofmann MPIK Heidelberg
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MPI Kernphysik, Heidelberg Humboldt Univ. Berlin Ruhr-Univ. Bochum Univ. Hamburg LSW Heidelberg Univ. Tübingen Ecole Polytechnique, Palaiseau APC Paris Univ. Paris VI-VII Paris Observatory, Meudon LAPP Annecy LAOG Grenoble LPTA Montpellier CEA Saclay CESR Toulouse Durham Univ. Dublin Inst. for Adv. Studies Charles Univ., Prague Yerewan Physics Inst. North-West Univ., Potchefstroom Univ. of Namibia, Windhoek VHE Gamma Ray Astromony with the H igh E nergy S tereoscopic S ystem: Highlights W. Hofmann MPIK Heidelberg September 28, 2004: Inauguration of the H.E.S.S. telescopes
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Four telescopes, 107 m 2 mirror area each 960 PMT cameras, field of view 5 o Observation in moonless nights, ~1000 h / year Each night several objects are tracked and ~300 images recorded per second First analysis (almost) online in the same night on PC cluster in Namibia Final analysis and calibration in Europe Energy threshold: ~ 100 GeV Sensitivity: 1% Crab in 25 h
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H.E.S.S. Highlights Galactic sources Galactic plane survey Supernova remnants Pulsar wind nebulae Binaries The Galactic Center Extragalactic sources Details & physics discussion in parallel sections
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H.E.S.S. Highlight: Galactic Plane Survey
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15 new TeV sources + 3 known Scale height: ≈ 0.3 o rms ≈ molecular gas S. Funk, OG 23 A. Lemiere, OG 23
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Ensemble characteristics Most sources are extended (size resolved if > 2…3’) Source size Photon index Spectra measured for all sources; relatively hard, = 2.3
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What are they ? 5 sources could be associated with SNR, e.g. HESS J1834-087 3 could be pulsar wind nebulae, typically displaced from the pulsar some coincide with EGRET, ASCA, … unidentified sources 3 have no counterpart known to us “beam size” (smoothed image)
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HESS J1813-178: now identified Beam White et al. 2005 Brogan et al. 2005 20 cm VLA Ubertini et al., 2005 Integral HESS J1813-178 (smoothed image)
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HESS J1614-518, J1708-410: no counterpart (yet) (smoothed image)
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H.E.S.S. Highlight: Resolved Supernova-Remnants H.E.S.S. Highlight: Resolved Supernova-Remnants SNR as cosmic particle accelerators Predicted power law spectrum dN/dE ~ E -2…2.2 Efficiency 10-50% Imaged using secondary gamma rays created in interactions with ambient medium
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H.E.S.S. Highlight: Resolved Supernova-Remnants H.E.S.S. Highlight: Resolved Supernova-Remnants RX J1713-3946 D. Berge, OG 22
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Spectra Preliminary Index ~ 2.1 – 2.2 Little variation across SNR Cutoff or break at high energy Acceleration of primary particles in SNR shock to well beyond 100 TeV
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H.E.S.S. Gamma rays ASCA X-rays NANTEN CO at ~1 kpc
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Primary population: e or p ? Electron model B ~ 10 G Need about 10 G B field to match flux ratios Simplest electronic models don’t work well
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RX J0852.0-4622 “Vela Junior” Feb. 2004 (3.2 h) New 04/05 data N. Komin, OG 22 Flux ~ Crab Index 2.1 ± 0.1 ROSAT contours 3D-Analysis Preliminary
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H.E.S.S. Highlight: Pulsar Wind Nebulae Pulsar wind creates void Pulsar wind termination shock Blondin et al. ApJ 563 (2001) 806 Pulsar winds have modest energetics compared to SN ejecta, but … most of the energy is in electrons radiative loss time scales for e ± are a few 1000 y, versus 10 7 y for p High ISM density Low ISM density Blondin et al. Reverse shock crushes PWN Asymmetric PWN due to collimated wind SNR reverse shock crushing into PWN
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H.E.S.S. Highlight: Pulsar Wind Nebulae Vela pulsar ROSAT contours B. Khelifi, OG 22 Preliminary Vela X hard spectrum ≈1.9 or ≈1.5 cutoff extends to 50 TeV no emission from vela pulsar detected
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Another pulsar wind: MSH 15-52 Contours: Rosat Greyscale: Radio B. Khelifi, OG 22 Photon index 2.27 ± 0.03 ± 0.20
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HESS J1825-137 X-rays Gaensler et al. TeV O. de Jager, OG 22
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H.E.S.S. Highlight: Distant and Close Binaries Mar 04 Douglas Gies (CHARA, GSU) William Pounds March 04 PSR B1259-63 3.4 year highly eccentric orbit around ~10 M Be star closest approach ~10 13 cm or ~20 stellar radii Pulsar eclipsed
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PSR B1259-63 PSR B1259-63 first variable galactic TeV source early March 04Apr./May 04Feb. 04 PSR B1259-63 HESS J1303-631 S. Schlenker, OG 22
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Distant and Close Binaries M. de Naurois, OG 22 with more data …
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Microquasar LS 5039 Microquasar LS 5039 first detection of TeV emission from a microquasar Paredes J. M. et al., A&A 2002 RA (mas) fueled by wind accretion(?) compact 4 (?) M object in eccentric 4 day orbit around 20-30 M star closest approach ~10 12 cm or ~2 stellar radii
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Spectral energy distribution Index 2.12 ± 0.15 Expect strong attenuation of gammas in photon field of massive star Hadronic component ? Orbital modulation ??
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SNR G0.9+0.1 GC The center of our Galaxy Sgr A East SNR ? Black hole ? DM Annihilation ? PWN
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Sagittarius A Colors: H.E.S.S. Contours: Radio Point-like core Extended tail Similar to NFW profile Angular distribution syst. error
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Gamma ray spectrum Preliminary Power law, index 2.3 No significant variability on year scale on month scale on day scale on hour scale on minute scale (in ~40 h obs. time distributed over 2 years) L. Rolland, OG 22 Preliminary
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Dark matter annihilation ? 20 TeV Neutralino 20 TeV KK particle proposed before H.E.S.S. data proposed based on early H.E.S.S. data J. Ripken, OG 22 Preliminary
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H.E.S.S. Highlight: Galactic center region
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GC molecular clouds Tsuboi et al. 1999
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H.E.S.S. Highlight: Galactic center region J. Hinton, OG 21
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Diffuse emission from the GC ridge Spectral index 2.29 ± 0.07 ± 0.20 Implies harder CR spectrum than in solar neighborhood Proximity of accelerator and target
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gamma rays CS (subtracted)
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Extragalactic TeV astronomy Physics of AGN jets Density of cosmological extragalactic background light (EBL) EBL x x x VHE EBL e + e -
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H.E.S.S. Highlight: New distant blazar sources 501 421 2155 2344 1426 Costamante & Ghisellini, 2002 2005 1101 2356 1ES 1101-232 z = 0.186 ~12 H 2356-309 z = 0.165 ~10 S. Pita, OG 23 M. Tluczykont, OG 23 Preliminary
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Spectra & E xtragalactic B ackground L ight 1 ES 1101 = 2.9±0.2 H 2356 (x 0.1) = 3.1±0.2 EBL Source spectrum = 1.5 Preliminary
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Spectra & E xtragalactic B ackground L ight 1 ES 1101 = 2.9±0.2 H 2356 (x 0.1) = 3.1±0.2 too much EBL Source spectrum Upper limit on EBL Preliminary
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Spectra & E xtragalactic B ackground L ight 1 ES 1101 = 2.9±0.2 H 2356 (x 0.1) = 3.1±0.2 too much EBL Not really a solution: add huge amount of UV photons to EBL problems with source energetics, X-ray/gamma-ray SED ratio UV EBL Preliminary
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X X X X
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Spectra & E xtragalactic B ackground L ight lower limits from galaxy counts measure- ments upper limits Reference shape HESS limits X X EBL resolved Universe more transparent
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Conclusion First H.E.S.S. results demonstrate that latest generation Cherenkov instruments have reached the critical sensitivity threshold Lots of interesting stuff out there – hard spectra and extended sources We’re looking forward to explore this domain further, together with CANGAROO, MAGIC, VERITAS, … MACE See talks and posters (OG 21, OG 22, OG 23, OG 27) for details on H.E.S.S. results, also M87 detection, PSK 2005, 2155 spectra, Crab, Mkn 421, … SNR, pulsar, microquasar, NGC253, … limits, …
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