Search for VHE gamma rays from SS433/W50 with the CANGAROO-II telescope
Sei. Hayashi, F. Kajino, T. Naito, A. Asahara, G. V. Bicknell, R. W., Clay, Y. Doi, P. G. Edwards, R. Enomoto, S. Gunji, S. Hara, T. Hara, T., Hattori, C. Itoh, S. Kabuki, H. Katagiri, A. Kawachi, T. Kifune, L. T., Ksenofontov, H. Kubo, T. Kurihara, R. Kurosaka, J. Kushida

TL;DR
This study searched for very high energy gamma rays from the SS433/W50 system using the CANGAROO-II telescope but found no significant signals, setting upper limits and constraining magnetic field strengths in the lobes.
Contribution
First observational search for sub-TeV gamma rays from SS433/W50 with the CANGAROO-II telescope, providing upper limits and magnetic field constraints.
Findings
No significant gamma-ray excess detected.
Set 99% confidence upper limits on gamma-ray flux.
Derived lower limits on magnetic field strengths.
Abstract
SS433, located at the center of the supernova remnant W50, is a close proximity binary system consisting of a compact star and a normal star. Jets of material are directed outwards from the vicinity of the compact star symmetrically to the east and west. Non-thermal hard X-ray emission is detected from lobes lying on both sides. Shock accelerated electrons are expected to generate sub-TeV gamma rays through the inverse-Compton process in the lobes. Observations of the western X-ray lobe region of SS433/W50 system have been performed to detect sub-TeV gamma-rays using the 10m CANGAROO-II telescope in August and September, 2001, and July and September, 2002. The total observation times are 85.2 hours for ON source, and 80.8 hours for OFF source data. No significant excess of sub-TeV gamma rays has been found at 3 regions of the western X-ray lobe of SS433/W50 system. We have derived 99%…
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