Modelling Spatial and Temporal Emission Properties of the Young Pulsar Wind Nebula Kes 75

  • 31 views

  • 0 favorites

  • uploaded June 25, 2021

Discussion timeslot (ZOOM-Meeting): 16. July 2021 - 18:00
ZOOM-Meeting URL: https://icrc2021.desy.de/pf_access_abstracts
Corresponding Session: https://icrc2021-venue.desy.de/channel/Presenter-Forum-1-Evening-All-Categories/48
Abstract:
'The H.E.S.S. Collaboration has firmly detected gamma-ray emission from HESS J1846-029, which is spatially coincident with Kes 75 (G29.7-0.3), one of the youngest composite supernova remnants in the Galaxy. This remnant contains the nebula of PSR J1846-0258, a glitching young pulsar with a particularly high spin-down luminosity that has manifested magnetar-like bursts in 2006. However, H.E.S.S. was not able to distinguish between shell and nebular emission. This source may also plausibly be associated with the HAWC-detected source 2HWC J1844-032. Recent *Chandra* observations revealed a rapid expansion of the embedded pulsar wind nebula over the past two decades and an X-ray flux decrease of 10% in 7 years. We apply a multi-zone spatio-temporal pulsar wind nebula model to the morphological and spectral data over several epochs, and find reasonable fits to the broadband radiation spectrum, X-ray surface brightness profile, expansion rate and photon spectral index in the X-ray energy range. Such spectral and morphological fitting constrains the model parameters, and may aid in clarifying the nature of the gamma-ray emission.'

Authors: Christo Venter
Co-Authors: Carlo Van Rensburg
Indico-ID: 1192
Proceeding URL: https://pos.sissa.it/395/928

Tags:
Presenter: Christo Venter

Additional files

More Media in "Gamma Ray Indirect"