On the possibility of sub-TeV Gamma-ray emission from Cyg X-3
W. Bednarek

TL;DR
This paper models gamma-ray emission from Cyg X-3, suggesting it likely emits sub-TeV gamma-rays below current detection thresholds, but future telescopes like CTA could detect such emissions.
Contribution
It applies an anisotropic inverse Compton cascade model to Cyg X-3, predicting gamma-ray spectra and light curves, and assesses detectability with current and future Cherenkov telescopes.
Findings
GeV gamma-ray light curves match Fermi observations
Sub-TeV gamma-ray emission is below current telescope sensitivities
Future CTA telescopes could detect Cyg X-3 gamma-rays above tens of GeV
Abstract
The compact X-ray binary system Cyg X-3 has been recently discovered as a source of GeV gamma-rays by the AGILE and the {\it Fermi} satellites. It shows emission features in the GeV gamma-rays similar to other gamma-ray binaries which were also observed in the TeV gamma-rays (LS 5039 and LSI +61 303). The question appears whether Cyg X-3 can be also detected in the TeV gamma-rays by the Cherenkov telescopes. Here we discuss this problem in detail based on the anisotropic inverse Compton (IC) e-p pair cascade model successfully applied to TeV gamma-ray binaries. We calculate the gamma-ray light curves and gamma-ray spectra expected from the cascade process occurring inside the Cyg X-3 binary system. It is found that the gamma-ray light curves at GeV energies can be consistent with the gamma-ray light curve observed by the Fermi for reasonable parameters of the orbit of the injection…
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