INTEGRAL observations of PSR J1811-1925 and its associated Pulsar Wind Nebula
A.J. Dean, A. De Rosa, V.A. McBride, R. Landi, A.B. Hill, L. Bassani,, A. Bazzano, A.J. Bird, P. Ubertini

TL;DR
This study uses INTEGRAL and Chandra data to analyze the spectral properties of PSR J1811-1925 and its nebula, revealing their contributions to soft gamma-ray emission and assessing potential links to nearby TeV sources.
Contribution
First detailed spectral analysis of PSR J1811-1925 and its nebula in the 20-100 keV range, clarifying emission origins and their relation to TeV sources.
Findings
Pulsar contributes about half of the soft gamma-ray emission.
Pulsar spectrum is hard with no cutoff up to 80 keV.
No morphological evidence links PSR J1811-1925 to HESS J1809-193.
Abstract
We present spectral measurements made in the soft (20-100 keV) gamma-ray band of the region containing the composite supernova remnant G11.2-0.3 and its associated pulsar PSR J1811-1925. Analysis of INTEGRAL/IBIS data allows characterisation of the system above 10 keV. The IBIS spectrum is best fitted by a power law having photon index of 1.8^{+0.4}_{-0.3} and a 20-100 keV flux of 1.5E{-11} erg/cm^2/s. Analysis of archival Chandra data over different energy bands rules out the supernova shell as the site of the soft gamma-ray emission while broad band (1-200 keV) spectral analysis strongly indicates that the INTEGRAL/IBIS photons originate in the central zone of the system which contains both the pulsar and its nebula. The composite X-ray and soft gamma-ray spectrum indicates that the pulsar provides around half of the emission seen in the soft gamma-ray domain; its spectrum is hard…
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