The Eel Pulsar Wind Nebula: a PeVatron-Candidate Origin for HAWC J1826-128 and HESS J1826-130 [HEAP]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2204.03185


HAWC J1826-128 is one of the brightest Galactic TeV gamma-ray sources detected by the High Altitude Water Cherenkov (HAWC) Observatory, with photon energies extending up to nearly $\sim$100 TeV. This HAWC source spatially coincides with the H.E.S.S. TeV source HESS J1826-130 and the “Eel” pulsar wind nebula (PWN), which is associated with the GeV pulsar PSR J1826-1256. In the X-ray band, Chandra and XMM-Newton revealed that the Eel PWN is composed of both a compact nebula ($\sim$15″) and diffuse X-ray emission ($\sim$6’$\times$2′) extending away from the pulsar. Our NuSTAR observation detected hard X-ray emission from the compact PWN up to $\sim$20 keV and evidence of the synchrotron burn-off effect. In addition to the spatial coincidence between HESS J1826-130 and the diffuse X-ray PWN, our multi-wavelength spectral energy distribution (SED) analysis using X-ray and gamma-ray data establishes a leptonic origin of the TeV emission associated with the Eel PWN. Furthermore, our evolutionary PWN SED model suggests (1) a low PWN B-field of $\sim$1 $\mu$G, (2) a significantly younger pulsar age ($t \sim5.7$ kyr) than the characteristic age ($\tau= 14.4$ kyr) and (3) a maximum electron energy of $E_{max} = 2$ PeV. The low B-field as well as the putative supersonic motion of the pulsar may account for the asymmetric morphology of the diffuse X-ray emission. Our results suggest that the Eel PWN may be a leptonic PeVatron particle accelerator powered by the $\sim$6-kyr-old pulsar PSR J1826-1256 with a spin-down power of $3.6 \times 10^{36}$ erg s$^{-1}$.

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D. Burgess, K. Mori, J. Gelfand, et. al.
Fri, 8 Apr 22
3/65

Comments: 19 pages, 12 figures