VERITAS Observations of High-Mass X-Ray Binary SS 433 [HEAP]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1708.04967


Despite decades of observations across all wavebands and dedicated theoretical modelling, the SS 433 system still poses many questions, especially in the high-energy range. SS 433 is a high-mass X-ray binary at a distance of $\sim 5.5$ kpc, with a stellar mass black hole in a $13$ day orbit around a supergiant $\sim$A7Ib star. SS 433 is unusual because it contains dual relativistic jets with evidence of high-energy hadronic particles. X-ray emission is seen from the central source as well as the jet termination regions, where the eastern and western jets interact with the surrounding interstellar medium. Very-high-energy gamma-ray emission is predicted both from the central source and multiple smaller regions in the jets. This emission could be detectable by current generation imaging atmospheric-Cherenkov telescopes like VERITAS. VERITAS has observed the extended region around SS 433 for $\sim 70$ hours during 2009-2012. No significant emission was detected either from the location of the black hole or the jet termination regions. We report 99\% confidence level flux upper limits above 600 GeV for these regions in the range $(1-10) \times 10^{-13} \mathrm{cm^{-2} \ s^{-1}}$. A phase resolved analysis also does not reveal any significant emission from the extended SS 433 region.

Read this paper on arXiv…

P. Kar and VERITAS. Collaboration
Thu, 17 Aug 17
25/50

Comments: 8 pages, ICRC 2017 (Bexco, Busan, S Korea)