Title: TeV Gamma Ray Sky
1TeV Gamma Ray Sky
- F.A. Aharonian (MPI-K, Heidelberg)
VLVnT2, Catania, Nov 11, 2005
2 TeV Gamma-Ray Astronomy
- a new observational discipline/a branch of High
Energy Astrophysics - provides crucial window in the spectrum of
cosmic E-M radiation - 0.1 TeV and 100
TeV - for exploration of nonthermal phenomena in
the Universe - in their most energetic, extreme and
violent forms - TeV gamma-rays unique carriers of
astrohysical information - are effectively produced in E-M and hadronic
interactions - penetrate freely throughout intergalactic and
galactic B-fields - are effectively detected by ground-based
detectors (IACTs)
3Intensity Shower Energy
Image Shape Background rejection
4stereoscopic approach
image of source is somewhere on the image axis
need several views to get unambiguous shower
direction
5H.E.S.S. - High Energy Stereoscopic System
13m diameter dish
920 pixel, 5 deg FoV camera
6 Potential of IACT Arrays
- sensitivity 10-13 (10-14) erg/cm2s
dynamical range 100 (3) GeV to 30 (300) TeV - angular resolution 3 (1-2) arcmin
energy resolution 10 to 20 - detection area 108 to 1010 (1011) cm2
photon statistics typically gtgt100
- FE erg/cm2 s an indicator how
- deep the energetics in the relevant
- energy band can be probed
- Lg4pd2 FE
-
- Lg,min 1033 (d/10kpc)2
- Lg,min 1041 (d/100Mpc)2
- two orders of magnitude
- deeper probes than EGRET
- gt 10 arcmin extended sources
- more sensitive than Chandra
- a basis for optimistic expec-
- tations (many sources)?
- YES and NO ...
- IACTs - very effective
- multi-functional tools
- spectrometry
- temporal studies
- morphology
- surveys
- extended sources
- from SNRs to
- Clusters of Galaxies
- transient phenomena
- mQSOs, AGN, GRBs, ...
- Galactic Astronomy,
- Extragalactic Astronomy
- Observational Cosmology
Energy Flux, E2J(E), erg/cm2 s
7 The VHE Sky today
11 Galactic, 11 Extragalactic, GC, plus 15
unidentified not many sources ... but at least 7
source populations !
H1426
1ES 1218
Mrk421
M87
Mrk501
PSR B1259
1ES 1101
1ES1959
SNR G0.9
RXJ 1713
RXJ 0852
Crab
Cas A
LS 5039
TeV 2032
Vela X
GC
1ES 2344
HESS J1303
Cygnus Diffuse
MSH 15-52
PKS 2155
H2356
PKS 2005
gal. compact
Galactic Center
8 H.E.S.S. survey of the central region of
the Galactic Plane 15 more (yet
unidentified) sources
S. Funk
9TeV g-ray Source Populations
-
Extended Galactic Objects - Shell Type SNRs
- Giant Molecular Clouds (star formation
regions) - Pulsar Wind Nebulae plerions
-
Compact Galactic Sources - Binary pulsar PRB 1259-63
- LS5039 a Microquasar
-
Galactic Center -
-
Extragalactic objects - M87 - a radiogalaxy
- TeV Blazars with redshift from 0.03 to
0.18 -
- and a large number of yet unidentified TeV
sources
10 Major Objectives of TeV g-ray Astronomy
- Origin of Galactic Cosmic Rays
- SNRs, Molecular clouds, Diffuse radiation
of the Galactic Disk, ... - Galactic and Extragalactic Sources with
relativistic flows - Pulsar Winds, mQSOs, Small and Large Scale
jets of AGN, GRBs... - Observational Gamma Ray Cosmology
- Large Scale Structures (Clusters of
Galaxies), Dark Matter Halos, - Diffuse Extragalactic Background radiation,
Pair Halos - ........
- ....
11SNRs and Origin of Cosmic Rays
- a mystery since the discovery in 1912 by V.
Hess - but now we are close (hopefully) to the
solution of the - (galactic) component below the energy 1015
eV thanks to - HESS capability for deep spectrometric and
morphological - studies of g-rays from SNRs in the
crucial energy band - 100 GeV to gt 30
TeV - GLAST will provide additional (complementary)
- information in the energy domain
100 MeV-100 GeV -
- km3 scale TeV neutrino detectors will provide
unambiguous - information about the hadronic
component of radiation -
12SNRs the most probable factories of GCRs ?
- (almost) common belief based on two arguments
-
- necessary amount of available energy 1051 erg
- Diffusive Shock Acceleration (DSA) 10
efficiency and E-2 type -
spectrum up to ?
at least 1015 eV -
- Straightforward proof detection of g-rays (and
neutrinos) from pp - interactions (as
products of decays of secondary pions) - Objective to probe the content of
nucleonic component of CRs - in SNRs within 10
kpc at the level 1049 -1050 erg - Realization sensitivity of detectors -
down to 10-13 erg/cm2 s - crucial energy
domain - 100 GeV - 100 TeV
13Cosmic Ray Accelerators ?
SNRs in our Galaxy 231(Green et al. 2001
with nonthermal X-ray emission - 10 or so
best candidates - young SNRs with nonthermal
synchrotron X-rays
SN1006
Diffusive source
Tycho
Kepler
CasA
30 arcmin
TeV emission
H.E.S.S. PSF
14 energy spectrum and
morphology
RXJ1713.7-3946 is a TeV source !
G2.1-2.1 with a curvature cutoff (?) at high
energies
no significant spectral variation
G2.1-2.2 -evidence of DSA of protons ?
HESS 2004 data preliminary !
15RX 1713.7-3946
interpretation
the key issue - identification of g-ray
emission mechanisms p0 or IC ? new! -
energy spectra 150GeV-30 TeV
from different parts - NW, S W, E,C if
a coordinate-independent single power law
from 100 GeV to 10 TeV
difficult to explain by IC implications
? if p0 - hadronic component is detected !
estimate of Wp (with an uncertainty
related to the uncertainty in n/d2 )
if IC - model independent estimate of We
(multi-TeV electrons) LeLx and
model independent map of B-field
TeV-keV correlations what this could mean?
16Origin of radiation ?
- hadronic origin preferable given
- the high density environment
- Wp (above 10 TeV) 3x1049 (n/1 cm-3) -1
erg - IC origin is not (yet) excluded, but this model
- requires B field less than
10 mG - more complex scenarios ? e.g. g-rays from NWSW
are contributed by - protons while gamma-rays from remaining parts are
due to IC g-rays - HESS observations with 4 telescope in
2004 and 2005 - provide higher quality data and
certain answers ?
17New ! Vela Junior (a 2o diameter remnant)
B-fields RXJ 10 mG Vela Jr 4 mG
B-fields RXJ 10 mG Vela Jr 4 mG
CANGAROO , HESS Flux - 1 Crab at 1 TeV
no problem with hadronic gamma-ray models good
news for km3 scale neutrino detectors ! (?)
uncertainty in d as large as factor of 3, n
poorly known if no nearby clouds - Wp could be
as large as 1050 erg
IC origin ? very small B-field, B lt 10 mG,
and very large
Emax gt 100 TeV two assumptions hardly can
co-exists within standard DSA models
18IC model B-field cannot exceed 10 mG and
does not provide
good spectral fit
19steeper electron acceleration spectra ? now a
better fit, but conflict with radio and
2 orders of magnitude larger energetics
20older source ?
21two zone model ?
tesc50 tB (prop. 1/E) B13 mG, B215mG R3
pc
22older source ?
23RXJ 1713.7-3946 Spectrum of protons dN/dEK
E-a exp-(E/Ecut)b
Wp(gt1 TeV) w 0.5x1050 (n/1cm-3)(d/1kpc)2
24spectra of gamma-rays and neutrinos
25neutrino fluxes from RXJ1713.7-3946
Alvarez-Muniz and Halzen dN/dE4.14x10-11
(E/1TeV) -2 ph/cm2 s TeV 4.1 x 10-11 ph/cm2
s above 1 TeV 4.1 x 10-12 ph/cm2 s above 10
TeV
Costantini and Vissani dN/dEg1.7 x 10-11
(Eg/1TeV) -2.2 ph/cm2 s TeV
dN/dEn 1.5 x 10-11 (En/1TeV)
-2.2 ph/cm2 s TeV 1.2 x 10-11 ph/cm2 s above 1
TeV 0.8 x 10-12 ph/cm2 s above 10 TeV
our calculations 1. 0.87x10-11 ph/cm2 s
above 1 TeV 0.99 x 10-13 ph/cm2 s above 10
TeV 2. 0.90x10-11 ---
1.70x10-13 --- 3.
0.88x10-11 ---
1.78x10-13 ---
Before flavor oscillations
26searching for galactic PeVatrons ...
TeV gammarays from Cas A and RX1713.7-3946,
Vela Jr a proof that SNRs are responsible for
the bulk of GCRs ? not yet
the hunt for galactic PeVatrons continues
unbiased approach deep survey of the Galactic
Plane not to miss any
recent (or currently active) acceleration site
SNRs, Pulsars/Plerions,
Microquasars...
not only from accelerators, but also from nearby
dense regions
27Gamm-rays/X-rays from dense regions surrounding
accelerators
- the existence of a powerful accelerator by itself
is not sufficenrt for - gamma radiation an additional component a
dense gas target - is required
gamma-rays from surrounding regions add much to
our knowledge about highest energy protons
which quickly escape the accelerator and
therefotr do not signifi- cantly contribute to
gamma-ray production inside the proton
accelerator-PeVatron
28older source steeper g-ray spectrum
tesc4x105(E/1 TeV) -1 k-1 yr (R1pc) k1
Bohm Difussion
Qp / E-2.1 exp(-E/1PeV)
Lp1038(1t/1kyr) -1 erg/s
29Giant Molecular Clouds (GMCs)
as tracers of Galactic Coismic Rays
- GMCs - 103 to 105 solar masses clouds
physically connected with - star formation regions - the likely sites of
CR accelerators (with - or without SNRs) - perfect objects to play
the role of targets ! - While travelling from the accelerator to the
cloud the spectrum of CRs - is a strong function of time t, distance to the
source R, and the (energy- - dependent) Diffusion Coefficient D(E)
- depending on t, R, D(E) one may expect
any proton, and - therefore gamma-ray spectrum
very hard, very soft, -
without TeV tail, without GeV counterpart ...
30R10pc to 1 - 100yr 2 1,000yr 3
- 10000yr
to1,000yr R 1 100pc 2 30pc 3
10pc
continuous accelerator of age to Lp1037 erg/s,
ap2, Emax100 TeV, diff.coef.
D(E)1027(E/10GeV)1/2 cm2/s Cloud at a distance
d and density 104 cm-3
31 First Unidentified TeV source TeV
J20324130
- Found by HEGRA seredipiously (6 sigma signal
accumulated 100h from - the Cygnus region and confirmed in 2002 by
pointing observations (130 h) - Basic features hard power-law spectrum (photon
index 1.9), constant flux - and slightly
extended (about 5 arcmin) source - Origin ? leptonic (IC) origin is
almost excluded, possibly dense gas cloud(s) - illuminated by
protons arriving from a recent nearby Pevatron
? -
- if this object is a representative of a large
source population, the planned survey - of the Galactic Disk by H.E.S.S. will
reveal (many ?) more new hot spots - talk at the 2nd workshop on Unident. Gamma Ray
Sources, Hong Kong, May 2004
32Electrons Inverse Compton
larger field
B-field smaller than 3 10-6 G (!) source
age less than 1000 yr (!) otherwise even
for very slow (Bohm) diffusion , the g-ray source
should be largder than 5 arcmin (for d1.6kpc)
faster escape
older source
33electrons bremsstrahlung
protons pp -gt po -gt gg
g-ray spectrum strongly depends on diffusion
coefficient D(E) D(E)1024(E/1GeV)0.5 h cm2/s
more comfortable parameters
34 A new unidentified sources is found
by HESS !
Feb 2004
March 2004
PSR1259-63
35 HESS detected new galactic sources
unidentified HESS sources
36HESS
Aharonian et al. 2005
TeV and CO data narrow distributions in
the Galactic Plane because of GMCs ? Star
Formation Regions ? or (most likely) both ?
NANTEN CO observations
Fukui et al.2005
37- Origin of Extended HESS TeV sources
- mechanisms of gamma-ray production in extended
sources - characteristic timescales
-
- pp p0 gg
tpp1x1015 (n/1cm-3) -1 sec - e2.7 K eg
tIC4x1012 (E/10 TeV) -1 sec - e-bremsstrahlung
tbr3x1014 (n/1cm-3) -1 sec - IC is very effective as long as magnetic field
B lt 10 mG - Bremsstrhlung important in dense, n gt 102 cm-3 ,
environments - pp interactions dominate over Bremsstrahlung if
the ratio of energy - densities of protons to electrons wp/we gt
10, and Inverse Compton - component if wp/we gt 500 (n/1cm-3) -1
(at energies above 10 TeV) -
38- Morphology vs. Energy Spectrum
- morphology pp depends on spatial
distributions of CR and gas nH(r)xNp(r) - IC depends only on
spatial distribution of electrons Ne(r) - energy spectra depends on acceleration spectrum
Q(E), energy losses dE/dt, - age of accelerator to, and character of
propagation/diffusion coefficient D(E) - pp generally energy spectrum independent of
morphology, but for young - objects energy spectrum could be harder at
larger distances than near - the accelerator angular size
increases with energy - IC very important are synchrotrin energy
losses - weak B-field ( lt10 mG) and/or fast
diffusion -
angular size increases with energy - strong B-field (100 mG) and/or slow
diffusion -
angular size decreases with energy -
- irregular shapes of g-ray images because of
inhomogeneous distrubition
39 Crab Nebula an acceleration of PeV
electrons !
Standard MHD theory cold ultrarelativistc pulsar
wind (G 105-106) terminates by a reverse
shock resulting in acceleration of electrons with
an unprecedented rate tacchrL/c, h lt 100 )
synchrotron radiation gt nonthermal
optical/X-ray nebula Inverse Compton gt
high energy gamma-ray nebula
1-10MeV
.
MAGIC new !
100TeV
HEGRA
- Crab Nebula a very powerful WLrot5x1038
erg/s - and extreme accelerator
Ee gt 1000 TeV - Emax60 (B/1G) -1/2 h-1/2 TeV and
hncut(0.7-2) af-1mc2 h-1 50-150 h-1 MeV -
- h1 minimum value allowed by classical
electrodynamics - Crab hncut 10MeV acceleration at 1 to 10
of the maximum rate ( h10-100) - maximum energy of electrons Eg100 TeV gt Ee
gt 100 (1000) TeV B0.1-1 mG - very close the value independently derived from
the MHD treatment of the wind
for comparison, in shell type SNRs DSA theory
gives h10(c/v)2104-105
40Challenges
- measurements of the energy-dependent size of IC
component - detection of possible hadronic component
-
- gt 1 TeV neutrinos (marginally)
detectable by Ice Cube - to probe location of creation and the Lorentz
factor of kinetic energy dominated wind through
IC scatering of wind electrons - cold wind can be visible/detectable in
gamma-rays with energy - E me c2 x wind Lorentz factor G
(because of K-N effect) -
- unique feature of VHE gamma-ray
astronomy - discovery of - ultrarelativistic MHD flows through
bulk motion Comptonzation -
41- TeV gamm-rays from other Plerions ?
- Crab Nebula is a very effective accelerator
-
but not an effective IC g-ray emitter - We see TeV gamma-rays from the Crab Nebula
because of - very large spin-down luminosity
-
- but gamma-ray flux ltlt spin-down flux
-
because of large magnetic field -
- but the strength of
B-field also depends on - less powerful pulsar weaker
magnetic field - higher gamma-ray efficiency
- detectable gamma-ray
fluxes from other plerions - HESS confirms this
prediction !
Plerions Pulsar Driven Nebulae
42 MSH 15-52
dN/dE ? E-G G 2.27?0.03?0.15 ?2/n
13.3/12 Flux gt 280 GeV 15 Crab Nebula
- the energy spectrum - a perfect hard power-law
with photon index G2.2-2.3 - over 2
decades ! - cannot be easily explained by IC
- hadronic (po-decay) origin of g-rays ?
since 2.7 K MBR is the main target field, TeV
images reflect spatial distributions of
electrons Ne(E,x,y) coupled with synchrotron
X-rays, TeV images allow measurements of B(x,y)
43 G0.90.1 (2)
- Spectrum
- F(gt0.2TeV) (5.7?0.7stat?1.2syst) 10-12 cm-2 s-1
- ?2 Crab flux, ?50 Crab luminosity
- Power-law ? 2.40?0.11stat?0.20syst
- Morphology
- Compatible with a point source
- Position compatible with the PWN position
- Emission not consistent with the SNR shell
Radio (90 cm)
B.Khelifi
44HESS J0835-456 (Vela X)
- Energy Spectrum
- F(gt1TeV) (1.23?0.12stat?0.25syst) 10-11 ph/cm2s
- ?75 Crab flux, ?7 Crab luminosity
- power-lawexponential cut-off
- G 1.48 ? 0.02stat ? 0.20 syst
- Ec 17.41 ? 1.41stat ? 3.5syst TeV
- Morphology
- ?L 23.4'?1.2' , ?l 15.6'?1.2'
-
HESS J0835-456
pulsar
IC spectrum ?
contours ROSAT
should be IC image of electrons ...
B.Kelifi, preliminary
45PSR1259-63 - a unique high energy laboratory
- binary pulsars - a special case with strong
effects associated with the - optical star on both
the dynamics of the pulsar wind - and the radiation
before and after its termination - the same 3 components - Pulsar/Pulsar/Wind/Synch.
Nebula - as in plerions - both the electrons of the cold wind and
shocke-accelerated electrons are illuminated
by - optical radiation from the companion star
detectable IC g-ray emission -
- the photon field is a strong function of time,
thus the only unknown parameter is B-field -
- TeV electrons are cooled and and radiate in deep
Klein-Nishina regime with - very interesting effects on both synchrotron
X-ray and IC gamma-rays
HESS detection of TeV gamma-rays from
PSR1259-63 at lt 0.1Crab level several days
before the periastron and 3weeks after the
periastron
but with characteristic timescales much shorter
- less than 1 h !
46energy flux of starlight close to the
periastron around 1 erg/cm3 B-field is
estimated between 0.1 to 1 G
predictable X and gamma-ray fluxes ?
time evolution of fluxes and energy spectra of X-
and g-rays contain unique information about the
shock dynamics, electron acceleration, B(r), ...
47 while the gamma-ray energy spectrum
can be (more or less) explained by IC the
lightcurve is still a puzzle deep
theoretical (in particular MHD) studies
needed to understand the source
48new ! HESS discovered TeV g-rays from a
microquasar !
- LS 5039 X-ray binary - BH O7 star
- presence of two basic components for TeV
gamma-ray production ! - 0.2c jet as accelerator of electrons (protons ?)
- 1039 erg/s luminosity star as source of seed
photons for IC or pg - scenario ? both gamma-ray production region
within (despite tgg gtgt 1) and - outside binary system (jet
termination site) cannot be excluded
mQSOs one of the highest priority targets of
the HESS project
49LS5039 as a (detectable) neutrino source ? )
- if TeV gamma-rays are produced within the
binary system (R lt 1012cm) - severe absorption of gt100 GeV gamma-rays
(g starlight -gt ee-) - up to a factor of 10 to 100
higher initial luminosity - severe radiative (synchrotron and
Compton) losses - difficult to accelerate
electrons to multi-TeV energies - Conclusions ? TeV gamma-rays of hadronic origin
with high luminosity, - and consequently high
detectable TeV neutrino fluxes (!?) - TeV neutrino fluxes strongly depend o the
production site of g-rays - the base of the jet/accretion disk and/or
wind/atmosphere of the star -
- X-ray binaries as sources of TeV
neutrions (V.Berezinsky, 1976, ...) -
again a hot topic ... -
) astro-ph 0508658
50 TeV Blazars and Diffuse Extragalactic
Background Radiation
- two topics relevant to different
research areas
TeV Blazars ideal laboratories to study particle
acceleration and MH structures in relativistic
jets, and powerful factories of GeV/TeV g-ray
beams DEBRA (also EBL, CIB,)
thermal emission components - between O/UV and
FIR produced by stars and
absorbed/re-emitted by dust,
and accumulated over the entire history of the
Universe
- but tightly coupled through intergalactic gg
absorption
51impact of the intergalactic absorption on the
understanding of physics of TeV blazars
52Models
- SSC or external Compton currently
most favoured models - easy to accelerate electrons to TeV energies
- easy to produce synchrotron and IC gamma-rays
- recent blazar observations require more
sophisticated leptonic models - Hadronic Models
- protons interacting with ambient plasma
neutrinos - very slow process
- protons interacting with photon fields
neutrinos - low efficiency severe absorption of TeV
g-rays - Proton Synchrotron
no neutrinos - very large magnetic field B100 G
accelaration rate c/rg - extreme accelerator (of EHE CRs) /
Poynting flux dominated flow
expect neutrinos from EGRET AGN but not from
TeV blazars
53 X-TeV flares of 1ES 1959650 in 2002
- Basic conclusions
- correlations
- X-TeV do correlate
- No optical TeV (X) correlations
- Radio essentialy stable
- puzzles
- strong TeV flare on June 4 not
- accompanied by an X-ray activity
- MAGIC also does not see strong
- TeV-keV correlations
- hadronic origin of TeV emision ?
- actually pg implies stronger TeV-X
- correlations than IC models
54 1ES 1426428 a different blazar ?
IC ?
Proton synchrotron?
- 1ES 1426428 does not agree with
- the red-blue phenomenology
55Cooling and acceleration times in Markarian 501
in TeV blazars synchrotron cooling time always ltlt
photomeson colling time
no neutrinos from TeV
blazars
no VHE gamma-rays from most powerful and distant
AGN and QSOs but (possibly)
detectable fluxes of VHE and UHE neutrinos
56- TeV g-rays - carriers of unique cosmological
information - about epochs and
history of evolution of galaxies - such information can be extracted through
studies of intergalactic - absorption features in the energy spectra of
blazars of given z, if - one can unambiguously identify the
intergalactic absorption features - two (both not perfect) approaches
- measure the intrinsic spectrum based on
comprehensive time- - dependent modeling of multiwavelength
data (broad band SED) - a very hard problem
-
- accept a principle the intrinsic spectrum
Jo(E)Jobs(E) expt(E) should be reasonable - but what means
reasonable ? - or if gamma-rays are of hadronic (pp -gt
po-gtgg) origin - measure the spectrum
of TeV neutrinos - a dream and still not sufficient
(intrinsic absorption of gs) -
absorption does not mean spectral cutoff
57New blazars detected at large z ! HESS
H2356-309 (z0.165), 1ES1101-232 (z0.186)
MAGIC 1ES1218304
(z0.182)
HESS
1 ES 1101 G 2.90.2
H 2356 (x 0.1) G 3.10.2
Preliminary
58reconstructing gamma-ray spectra with different
EBL models
HESS collaboration, submitted to Nature
59HESS robust upper limits on EBL at O/NIR
- EBL (almost) resolved at NIR
- Universe more transparent
- intrinsic gamma-ray spectra
direct measurements
upper limits
lower limits from galaxy counts
601ES1426428 - a special case
- many puzzles
- difficult to believe... TeV gamma-rays from
this source at z0.129 despite - the intergalactic absorption gtgt 10
- TeV peak significantly higher than the X-ray peak
- violation of the red-blue blazar
paradigm cannot be easily explained - by standard SSC or external Compton models
- only a specific class of EBL models allows
reasonable instrinsic TeV spectrum -
61TeV g-rays from GC
GC a unique site that harbors many
interesting sources packed with un-
usually high density around the most
remarkable object 3x106 Mo SBH Sgr A
many of them are potential g-ray emitters -
Shell Type SNRs Plerions, Giant Molecular
Clouds Sgr A itself, Dark Matter
HESS FoV5o
all of them are in the FoV HESS ! and can be
probed down to a flux level 10-13 erg/cm2 s
and localized within ltlt 1 arcmin
62 Position?
systematic and statistical errors on source
location by HESS are comparable
20-30 arcseconds
63two comments
- typically (often) theorists face problems of
interpreting g-ray - observations in the frameworks of
"standard" models, but in the - case of TeV observations of GC we face an
opposite problem - TeV data can be explained within several
(essentially different) - scenarios and by several
different radiation mechanisms - the FoV, PSF, and sensitivity of HESS (and
GLAST) perfectly match - the performance of other relevant instruments
at other wavelengths - (Chandra, XMM, INTEGRAL, VLT, radio and mm
telescopes, etc.) - both for compact objects like Sgr A and
diffuse structures - HESS and GLAST can provide perfect temporal,
spectroscopic and - morphological studies over six (100 MeV
to 100 GeV) g-ray decades
64TeV g-rays from central lt10 pc region of GC
- Annihilation of DM ? mass of DM particles gt 10
TeV ? - Sgr A 3 106 Mo BH ? yes, but lack of
variability - even the inner R lt 10 Rg region is
transparent for TeV g-rays ! - SNR Sgr A East ? why not ?
- Plerionic (IC) source(s) why not ?
- Interaction of CRs with GMCs ? easily
65Sagittarius A - point-like but not variable
syst. error
power-law index 2.3
Contours - radio
66Point-like but not variable TeV source an
argument in favor of DM origin of detected TeV
gamma-rays ?
- angular size of TeV signal can be explained by
DM annihilation for - n(r) profile like r-a with a gt 1.1 i.e.
Qg(r)C1n2 Qor-2a - but the absolute intensity of the TeV signal
requires much sharper - density
profile n(r) within lt 0.1 pc - Note that the same can be the case of CR
interactions with gas - Qg(r)C2ncr(r)
nH(r)Qor-(a1a2) , - e.g. CR density decreases like r-2 and the gas
density like r-0.2 - absolute g-ray fluxes can be explained naturally
by interactions - of run-away
protons with surrounding dense gas -
C1 and C2 interaction constants
(cross-sections)
67A concluding remark
- We are just at the gates of the Paradise of
- TeV astrophysics and
Cosmology - condition for entrance? FE gt 10-14 erg/cm2 s
(0.03-100 TeV) - realization ? 1 to 10 km2
scale IACT arrays (super-HESS) - timescales short (years)
- no technological challenges - price for the ticket very reasonable
including -
(almost) 100 guarante for -
the success (great discoveries) - several tens (100 ?) of 15m diameter class 5
deg FoV telescopes -
located on 3.5-4 km
a.s.l. - another major objective reduction of the
energy threshold down to -
lt 10 GeV energies (different approaches,
-
different astrophysical objectives /motivations)