Constraints on the multi-TeV particle population in the Coma Galaxy Cluster with H.E.S.S. observations
The HESS Collaboration: F.A. Aharonian, et al

TL;DR
This study used H.E.S.S. telescopes to search for TeV gamma-ray emission from the Coma Cluster, setting upper limits that challenge existing models of cosmic-ray populations and gamma-ray production in galaxy clusters.
Contribution
First to provide stringent TeV gamma-ray upper limits for the Coma Cluster, constraining cosmic-ray proton energy content and testing theoretical emission models.
Findings
No gamma-ray emission detected above 1 TeV.
Upper limits constrain cosmic-ray energy to about 0.2 times the thermal energy.
Most optimistic models of gamma-ray emission are ruled out.
Abstract
The H.E.S.S. (High Energy Stereoscopic System) telescopes observed Coma for ~8hr in a search for gamma-ray emission at energies >1TeV. The large 3.5deg FWHM field of view of H.E.S.S. is ideal for viewing a range of targets at various sizes including the Coma cluster core, the radio-relic (1253+275) and merger/infall (NGC 4839) regions to the southwest, and features greater than deg away. No evidence for point-like nor extended TeV gamma-ray emission was found and upper limits to the TeV flux F(E) for E>1, >5, and >10TeV were set for the Coma core and other regions. Converting these limits to an energy flux E^2F(E) the lowest or most constraining is the E>5TeV upper limit for the Coma core (0.2deg radius) at ~8Crab flux units or ~10^{-13}ph cm^{-2} s^{-1}. The upper limits for the Coma core were compared with a prediction for the gamma-ray emission from proton--proton interactions, the…
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