Radio continuum and near-infrared study of the MGRO J2019+37 region
J.M. Paredes, J.Marti, C.H. Ishwara-Chandra, J.R. Sanchez-Sutil, A.J., Munoz-Arjonilla, J. Moldon, M. Peracaula, P.L. Luque-Escamilla, V. Zabalza,, V. Bosch-Ramon, P. Bordas, G.E. Romero, M. Ribo

TL;DR
This study investigates the MGRO J2019+37 TeV gamma-ray source by conducting radio, near-infrared, and X-ray observations to identify potential counterparts and understand its emission mechanisms.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive multi-wavelength catalog of sources in the MGRO J2019+37 region and analyzes potential counterparts contributing to its TeV emission.
Findings
Identified 362 radio sources in the region.
Cross-matched radio sources with NIR and X-ray data.
Discussed potential counterparts like pulsar PSR J2021+3651 and HII regions.
Abstract
(abridged) MGRO J2019+37 is an unidentified extended source of VHE gamma-rays originally reported by the Milagro Collaboration as the brightest TeV source in the Cygnus region. Its extended emission could be powered by either a single or several sources. The GeV pulsar AGL J2020.5+3653, discovered by AGILE and associated with PSR J2021+3651, could contribute to the emission from MGRO J2019+37, although extrapolation of the GeV spectrum does not explain the detected multi-TeV flux. Our aim is to identify radio and NIR sources in the field of the extended TeV source MGRO J2019+37, and study potential counterparts that could contribute to its emission. We surveyed a region of about 6 square degrees with the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope (GMRT) at the frequency 610 MHz. We also observed the central square degree of this survey in the NIR Ks-band using the 3.5 m telescope in Calar Alto.…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
