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Outline Cosmic Rays and Super-Nova Remnants

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Presentation on theme: "Outline Cosmic Rays and Super-Nova Remnants"— Presentation transcript:

0 14th ISCRA, Erice July 2004 Observation of VHE gamma rays from the remnant of SN1006 with HEGRA CT1 SN1006 seen by CHANDRA Vincenzo Vitale for the HEGRA-CT1Munich Group

1 Outline Cosmic Rays and Super-Nova Remnants
TeV gamma rays emission from SNRs The remnant of SN1006 Imaging Atmospheric Cherenkov Telescopes Data analysis ( observations) Large zenith angle observations Off-axis and Extended source observations Calibrations Results

2 Shock SNR Gamma rays G.Cosmic Rays
VHE electrons + photons  gamma rays via Inverse Compton (synchrotron radiation) VHE nucleus + target (Inter- Stellar Matter)  π 0   Gamma rays

3 The remnant of SN1006 One of the brightest SN (type Ia) Age ~ 1Ky
Distance /- 0.3 Radius pc (~ 30 arcmin) Shock speed Km/sec From Roque D.L.Muchachos -> not more than 19 degrees above horizon CT1 obs. : 220h, 345K deg ZA

4 Non-thermal emissions
ASCA NE SW CANGAROO Significance map 5.2 7.5 ROSAT NE and SW parts of the rim are non-thermal X rays emitters (ASCA, ROSAT) 1-20 TeV gamma rays from NE, reported by Cangaroo

5 Models Berezhko et al. 2002 Naito et al.1999
Theories exploit both Inverse Compton (electrons) and neutral Pion (nuclei) for the TeV gamma rays emission Evidence of acceleration of electrons up to TeV Acceleration of nuclei not excluded

6 Some New Observations XMM Newton Chandra Magnetic Field SN 1006
CANGAROO significance map 6 Chandra Magnetic Field SN 1006 Berezhko et al 2003 ~ 100 μG Bamba et al ~ μG

7 Imaging Air Cherenkov Telescope
Energy, flux, type and direction of primary particle from shower image Gammas and hadrons shower differ for image features and arrival direction Information extracted from images (image parameters) Monte Carlo simulations allow gamma/hadrons separation and calibration Standard candle (Crab Nebula) Gamma 1 gamma/ 300 nuclei Shara 2001

8 Analysis technique Different shape ==> different distributions of the image parameters Selection cuts on the image parameters

9 Large zenith angle observations
Higher maximum detectable energy Increase of eff. collection area Transformation of images: dimensions reduction, images closer to field of view center Increasing of energy threshold (factor ~25 from 0 to 70deg ZA) Reduction of gamma/h separation power Difficulties for MC simulations

10 Background rejection (hadrons)
Exp.Hadrons MC gamma Study of the dependence of the image parameters on the zenith angle Selection cuts with zenith angle dependence

11 Off-axis and Extended source observations
HEGRA CT1 signal from source candidate is searched in the F.O.V. False Source Method : point- like source analysis repeated on a regular grid (according to angular resolution) Alternative method : the incoming direction of a shower lies on its axis and has distance from COG computable using MC Point-like source excess 2d distribution For HEGRA CT1 radial sigma ~ 0.12 deg =7.2’

12 Mrk 501 Off-axis 160 20 Excess sky map Analysis tested with a strong signal (Mrk501, 1997) off-axis, in order to simulated the SN1006 observation with exp. data. A significant bump at small Alpha (signal) Good estimate of the residual background

13 Effective collection area
106 m2 PI=-1 PI=-3 50 TeV Differential trigger rate (Source differential flux= A*E-PI A= cm-2 sec -1, PI from -1 to -3 ) Effective collection area

14 Calibration(I): Impact Parameter
Impact Parameter as linear comb.of parameters *f(Z.A.) Free parameters fixed with an optimization routine and MC

15 Calibration (II): Energy
Energy calculated as E=L.C.(Size,Imp.Par.)*g(Z.A.) Free parameters fixed with an optimization routine and MC

16 Stars as position reference
Sky map Map of anode currents

17 Results: Sky Maps An excess is found at NE part of the rim
Beta Lup Kappa Can SN1006 SHELL Beta Lup Kappa Can SN1006 SHELL An excess is found at NE part of the rim

18 Results: signal distribution
Distribution of the excess 100 -50 103 +/- 17 excess events over a background of 225 ev.

19 Results: Alpha parameter distributions
Beta Lup Kappa Can A signal is present in the Alpha parameter distribution

20 Results: Integral and differential fluxes
Photon Index Energy threshold TeV Flux 10-13 cm-2 s-1 Flux error -1.0 22+-2 2.40 0.39 -1.5 2.15 0.36 -2.0 18+-2 2.35 -2.5 2.21 -3.0 1.72 0.29

21 Conclusions (I) A large zenith angle observation (first time at >70 deg) has been successfully performed. Evidence for an excess of multi-TeV γ rays has been found. The excess sky position is consistent with NE part of the SN1006 remnant Use of bright stars as position reference (0.1deg precision) The statistical significance of the excess is 5.1 standard deviations after trials (5.6 before trials).

22 Conclusions (II) Energy threshold is ~(18 +/- 2) TeV.
The Integral Flux from the NE part of the rim is (2.35 +/- 0.4stat +/- 0.7sys ) *10-13 ph cm-2 sec-1, phot. ind. = -2.0 The Diff. Flux (without 30% systematic error) is (0.30+/-0.15 ) *10-11(E/TeV) –( ) ph cm-2 sec- 1 TeV-1 The flux upper limits for SW cap and shell-center are: 0.83 and 0.66 *10-13 ph cm-2 sec -1 (95% C.L., P.I.=-2.0)

23 Conclusions (III) experiment Flux at 1TeV 10-11 cm-2 sec-1 TeV-1 Photon index CANGAROO 1-20 TeV CT1 18-45(60) TeV CT1 results are obtained above an energy threshold of 18TeV, the 1 TeV flux is extrapolated for comparison The maximum flux variation is in the order of (–6%)*year-1


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