Ultrahigh-energy photons up to 1.4 petaelectronvolts from 12 γ-ray Galactic sources

The extension of the cosmic-ray spectrum beyond 1 petaelectronvolt (PeV; 10 15 electronvolts) indicates the existence of the so-called PeVatrons—cosmic-ray factories that accelerate particles to PeV energies. We need to locate and identify such objects to find the origin of Galactic cosmic rays 1 ....

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature (London) 2021-06, Vol.594 (7861), p.33-36
Hauptverfasser: Bi, Y. J., Chang, J., Chang, X. C., Chen, Long, Chen, M. L., Chen, Q. H., Chen, S. Z., Chen, T. L., Chen, X. L., Chen, Y., Cheng, N., Cheng, Y. D., Cui, S. W., Dai, B. Z., Fan, J. H., Fan, Y. Z., Feng, L., Feng, Y. L., Gao, C. D., Guo, J. G., Guo, Y. Q., Guo, Y. Y., Heller, M., Hu, S., Hu, X. J., Huang, X. T., Ji, F., Ji, X. L., Jiang, Z. J., Jin, C., Li, B. B., Li, Cong, Li, Cheng, Li, F., Li, H. C., Li, K., Li, Zhuo, Liang, E. W., Lin, S. J., Liu, B., Liu, H. D., Liu, J. S., Liu, J. Y., Liu, S. M., Liu, Y. N., Liu, Z. X., Lu, R., Ma, L. L., Ma, X. H., Montaruli, T., Pattarakijwanich, P., Rulev, V., Shao, L., Sheng, X. D., Song, H. C., Sun, Q. N., Sun, Z. B., Tam, P. H. T., Wang, C., Wang, H., Wang, J. S., Wang, L. P., Wang, X. J., Wang, X. Y., Wang, Y. D., Wang, Z. H., Wen, T., Wu, C. Y., Wu, W. X., Wu, X. F., Xi, S. Q., Xiang, G. M., Xin, G. G., Xin, Y. L., Xing, Y., Xu, R. X., Xue, L., Yang, F. F., Yang, J. Y., Yang, L. L., Yang, M. J., Yang, R. Z., Yang, S. B., Yu, Y. H., Yuan, Q., Zhai, X. X., Zhang, H. Y., Zhang, J. L., Zhang, R., Zhang, S. R., Zhang, Yi, Zhang, Y. F., Zhang, Y. L., Zhao, J., Zheng, F., Zheng, Y., Zhou, H., Zhou, P., Zhu, C. G., Zhu, F. R.
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Zusammenfassung:The extension of the cosmic-ray spectrum beyond 1 petaelectronvolt (PeV; 10 15 electronvolts) indicates the existence of the so-called PeVatrons—cosmic-ray factories that accelerate particles to PeV energies. We need to locate and identify such objects to find the origin of Galactic cosmic rays 1 . The principal signature of both electron and proton PeVatrons is ultrahigh-energy (exceeding 100 TeV) γ radiation. Evidence of the presence of a proton PeVatron has been found in the Galactic Centre, according to the detection of a hard-spectrum radiation extending to 0.04 PeV (ref. 2 ). Although γ-rays with energies slightly higher than 0.1 PeV have been reported from a few objects in the Galactic plane 3 – 6 , unbiased identification and in-depth exploration of PeVatrons requires detection of γ-rays with energies well above 0.1 PeV. Here we report the detection of more than 530 photons at energies above 100 teraelectronvolts and up to 1.4 PeV from 12 ultrahigh-energy γ-ray sources with a statistical significance greater than seven standard deviations. Despite having several potential counterparts in their proximity, including pulsar wind nebulae, supernova remnants and star-forming regions, the PeVatrons responsible for the ultrahigh-energy γ-rays have not yet been firmly localized and identified (except for the Crab Nebula), leaving open the origin of these extreme accelerators. Observations of γ-rays with energies up to 1.4 PeV find that 12 sources in the Galaxy are PeVatrons, one of which is the Crab Nebula.
ISSN:0028-0836
1476-4687
DOI:10.1038/s41586-021-03498-z