2013
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637x/773/1/77
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CONSTRAINTS ON THE GALACTIC POPULATION OF TeV PULSAR WIND NEBULAE USINGFERMILARGE AREA TELESCOPE OBSERVATIONS

Abstract: Pulsar wind nebulae (PWNe) have been established as the most populous class of TeV γ-ray emitters. Since launch, the Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) has identified five high-energy (100 MeV < E < 100 GeV) γ-ray sources as PWNe and detected a large number of PWN candidates, all powered by young and energetic pulsars. The wealth of multi-wavelength data available and the new results provided by Fermi-LAT give us an opportunity to find new PWNe and to explore the radiative processes taking place in known ones. T… Show more

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Cited by 115 publications
(140 citation statements)
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“…Galactic Plane Survey revealed two sources in this region: HESS J1420−607 centered north of PSR J1420−6048 (near K3), and HESS J1418−609 coincident with the Rabbit nebula (Aharonian et al 2006c). In a previous analysis of the region above 10 GeV using Fermi-LAT data (Acero et al 2013), HESS J1420−607 and HESS J1418−609 were detected as two point sources with different spectral shapes: a hard spectrum for the first one (suggesting a PWN origin), and a soft spectrum with an energy cutoff at a few GeV for the second one, suggestive of pulsar emission and thus likely due to contamination from PSR J1418−6058. It was then detected as a very extended source 64 of 0°.33 covering both PWNe in Ackermann et al (2016).…”
Section: The Pwn Hess J1857+026 (Fges J18578+0246)mentioning
confidence: 83%
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“…Galactic Plane Survey revealed two sources in this region: HESS J1420−607 centered north of PSR J1420−6048 (near K3), and HESS J1418−609 coincident with the Rabbit nebula (Aharonian et al 2006c). In a previous analysis of the region above 10 GeV using Fermi-LAT data (Acero et al 2013), HESS J1420−607 and HESS J1418−609 were detected as two point sources with different spectral shapes: a hard spectrum for the first one (suggesting a PWN origin), and a soft spectrum with an energy cutoff at a few GeV for the second one, suggestive of pulsar emission and thus likely due to contamination from PSR J1418−6058. It was then detected as a very extended source 64 of 0°.33 covering both PWNe in Ackermann et al (2016).…”
Section: The Pwn Hess J1857+026 (Fges J18578+0246)mentioning
confidence: 83%
“…Galactic Plane Survey , was previously analyzed assuming the published morphology, an elliptical Gaussian with extensions of 0°.41 and 0°.25 (Acero et al 2013). In this new work, it is detected as two separate disks whose origin and real separation remain unclear since both γ-ray components present the same spectral shape as can be seen in Figure 7 (left).…”
Section: Hess J1841−055 (Fges J18394−0554 and Fges J18414mentioning
confidence: 85%
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“…Fermi LAT has only published upper limits on the flux from the PWN [24]. VERITAS likewise has no confirmed detection of the Geminga PWN [25,26].…”
Section: Pulsar Wind Nebulae and The Positron Excessmentioning
confidence: 99%