The Innovation (Apr 2025)

Ultra-high-energy γ-ray emission associated with the tail of a bow-shock pulsar wind nebula

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 4
p. 100802

Abstract

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In this study, we present a comprehensive analysis of an unidentified point-like ultra-high-energy (UHE) γ-ray source, designated as 1LHAASO J1740+0948u, situated in the vicinity of the middle-aged pulsar PSR J1740+1000. The detection significance reached 17.1 σ (9.4 σ) above 25 TeV (100 TeV). The source energy spectrum extended up to 300 TeV, which was well fitted by a log-parabola function with N0 = (1.93 ± 0.23) × 10−16 TeV−1 cm−2 s−1, α = 2.14 ± 0.27, and β = 1.20 ± 0.41 at E0 = 30 TeV. The associated pulsar, PSR J1740+1000, resides at a high galactic latitude (Gb) and powers a bow-shock pulsar wind nebula (BSPWN) with an extended X-ray tail. The best-fit position of the γ-ray source appeared to be shifted by 0.2° with respect to the pulsar position. As (1) the currently identified pulsar halos do not demonstrate such offsets and (2) the centroid of the γ ray emission is approximately located at the extension of the X-ray tail, we speculate that the UHE γ-ray emission may originate from re-accelerated electron/positron pairs that are advected away in the bow-shock tail.

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