Giada Peron, Giovanni Morlino, Stefano Gabici, Elena Amato, Archana Purushothaman and Marcella Brusa
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In this Letter we investigate this latter scenario by comparing available catalogs of SCs and H ii regions, obtained from Gaia and Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer observations, to the gamma-ray GeV and TeV catalogs built from Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT), H.E.S.S., and LHAASO data. The significance of the correlation between catalogs is evaluated by comparing the results with simulations of synthetic populations. A strong correlation emerges between Fermi-LAT-unidentified sources and H ii regions that trace massive SCs in the earliest (≲1–2 Myr) phase of their life, where no supernova explosions have happened yet, confirming that winds of massive stars can alone accelerate particles and produce gamma-ray emission at least up to GeV energies. The association with TeV energy sources is less evident. Similarly, no significant association is found between Gaia SCs and GeV nor TeV sources. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
星团(SC)是潜在的宇宙射线加速器,因此预计会发射高能辐射。然而,只有在少数情况下才可能清楚地探测到这类源的伽马射线辐射。这可能有两种不同的原因:要么可探测到的SC只占银河系SC总数的一小部分,要么发射伽马射线的SC不被认为是SC,因而被列入未识别源的集合中。在这封信中,我们通过比较从盖亚(Gaia)和宽视场红外巡天探测器(Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer)观测中获得的SC和H ii区域星表,以及从费米大面积望远镜(LAT)、H.E.S.S.和LHAASO数据中获得的伽马射线GeV和TeV星表,对后一种情况进行了研究。通过将结果与合成种群的模拟结果进行比较,评估了星表之间相关性的重要性。在费米-LAT未识别源和H ii区域之间出现了很强的相关性,这些区域追踪着处于生命早期(≲1-2 Myr)阶段的大质量SC,在这个阶段还没有发生超新星爆炸,这证实了大质量恒星的风可以单独加速粒子并产生至少高达GeV能量的伽马射线辐射。与 TeV 能量源的关联则不那么明显。同样,盖亚SC与GeV或TeV能量源之间也没有发现明显的联系。我们将这一事实归因于这些天体的延伸范围较大,但也归因于盖亚选择的内在偏差,即偏向于被较低的目标气体密度包围的SC,否则会阻碍光波波段的探测。
On the Correlation between Young Massive Star Clusters and Gamma-Ray Unassociated Sources
Star clusters (SCs) are potential cosmic-ray accelerators and therefore are expected to emit high-energy radiation. However, a clear detection of gamma-ray emission from this source class has only been possible for a handful of cases. This could in principle result from two different reasons: either detectable SCs are limited to a small fraction of the total number of Galactic SCs, or gamma-ray-emitting SCs are not recognized as such and therefore are listed in the ensemble of unidentified sources. In this Letter we investigate this latter scenario by comparing available catalogs of SCs and H ii regions, obtained from Gaia and Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer observations, to the gamma-ray GeV and TeV catalogs built from Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT), H.E.S.S., and LHAASO data. The significance of the correlation between catalogs is evaluated by comparing the results with simulations of synthetic populations. A strong correlation emerges between Fermi-LAT-unidentified sources and H ii regions that trace massive SCs in the earliest (≲1–2 Myr) phase of their life, where no supernova explosions have happened yet, confirming that winds of massive stars can alone accelerate particles and produce gamma-ray emission at least up to GeV energies. The association with TeV energy sources is less evident. Similarly, no significant association is found between Gaia SCs and GeV nor TeV sources. We ascribe this fact to the larger extension of these objects but also to an intrinsic bias in the Gaia selection toward SCs surrounded by a lower target gas density, which would otherwise hinder the detection in the optical wave band.