4.7 Article

First HAWC observations of the Sun constrain steady TeV gamma-ray emission

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW D
Volume 98, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevD.98.123011

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. US National Science Foundation (NSF)
  2. US Department of Energy Office of High-Energy Physics
  3. Laboratory Directed Research and Development (LDRD) program of Los Alamos National Laboratory
  4. Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnologia (CONACyT), Mexico [271051, 232656, 260378, 179588, 239762, 254964, 271737, 258865, 243290, 132197, 281653]
  5. Laboratorio Nacional HAWC de Rayos Gamma
  6. L'OREAL Fellowship forWomen in Science 2014
  7. DGAPA-UNAM [IG100317, IN111315, IN111716-3, IA102715, 109916, IA102917, IN112218]
  8. VIEP-BUAP
  9. PIFI
  10. University of Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation
  11. Institute of Geophysics, Planetary Physics, and Signatures at Los Alamos National Laboratory
  12. Polish Science Center [DEC-2014/13/B/ST9/945, DEC-2017/27/B/ST9/02272]
  13. Coordinacion de la Investigacion Cientifica de la Universidad Michoacana
  14. Royal Society-Newton Advanced Fellowship [180385]
  15. NSF [PHY-1714479]
  16. Office of High Energy Physics of the U.S. Department of Energy [DE-SC00012567, DE-SC0013999]
  17. Croucher Fellowship
  18. Benoziyo Fellowship
  19. NASA [80NSSC17K0754]
  20. Red HAWC, Mexico
  21. PROFOCIE

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Steady gamma-ray emission up to at least 200 GeV has been detected from the solar disk in the Fermi-LAT data, with the brightest, hardest emission occurring during solar minimum. The likely cause is hadronic cosmic rays undergoing collisions in the Sun's atmosphere after being redirected from ingoing to outgoing in magnetic fields, though the exact mechanism is not understood. An important new test of the gamma-ray production mechanism will follow from observations at higher energies. Only the High Altitude Water Cherenkov (HAWC) Observatory has the required sensitivity to effectively probe the Sun in the TeV range. Using 3 years of HAWC data from November 2014 to December 2017, just prior to the solar minimum, we search for 1-100 TeV gamma rays from the solar disk. No evidence of a signal is observed, and we set strong upper limits on the flux at a few 10(-12) Te V-1 cm(-2) s(-1) at 1 TeV. Our limit, which is the most constraining result on TeV gamma rays from the Sun, is similar to 10% of the theoretical maximum flux (based on a model where all incoming cosmic rays produce outgoing photons), which in turn is comparable to the Fermi-LAT data near 100 GeV. The prospects for a first TeV detection of the Sun by HAWC are especially high during the solar minimum, which began in early 2018.

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