4.7 Article

Integral IGR J18135-1751 = HESS J1813-178:: A new cosmic high-energy accelerator from keV to TeV energies

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 629, Issue 2, Pages L109-L112

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/447766

Keywords

gamma rays : observations; X-rays : general; X-rays : individual (HESS J1813-178, IGR J18135-1751, AGPS 273.4-17.8)

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We report the discovery of a soft gamma-ray source, namely, IGR J18135 - 1751, detected with IBIS, the Imager on Board the INTEGRAL Satellite. The source is persistent and has a 20 - 100 keV luminosity of similar to 5.7 x 10(34) ergs s(-1) (assuming a distance of 4 kpc). This source is coincident with one of the eight unidentified objects recently reported by the HESS collaboration as part of the first TeV survey of the inner part of the Galaxy. Two of these new sources found along the Galactic plane, HESS J1813 - 178 and HESS J1614 - 518, have no obvious lower energy counterparts, a fact that motivated the suggestion that they might be dark cosmic ray accelerators. HESS J1813 - 178 has a strongly absorbed X-ray counterpart, the ASCA source AGPS 273.4 - 17.8, showing a power-law spectrum with photon index similar to 1.8 and a total ( Galactic plus intrinsic) absorption corresponding to N-H similar to 5 x 10(22) cm(-2). We hypothesize that the source is a pulsar wind nebula embedded in its supernova remnant. The lack of X-ray or gamma-ray variability, the radio morphology, and the ASCA spectrum are all compatible with this interpretation. In any case we rule out the hypothesis that HESS J1813 - 178 belongs to a new class of TeV objects or that it is a cosmic dark particle accelerator.

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