The Hard X-Ray View of the Young Supernova Remnant G1.9+0.3
Andreas Zoglauer, Stephen P. Reynolds, Hongjun An, Steven E. Boggs,, Finn E. Christensen, William W. Craig, Chris L. Fryer, Brian W. Grefenstette,, Fiona A. Harrison, Charles J. Hailey, Roman A. Krivonos, Kristin K. Madsen,, Hiromasa Miyasaka, Daniel Stern, William W. Zhang

TL;DR
NuSTAR observations of the young supernova remnant G1.9+0.3 reveal non-thermal X-ray emission up to 30 keV, consistent with synchrotron radiation from accelerated electrons, providing insights into particle acceleration and magnetic fields.
Contribution
This study presents the first detailed hard X-ray analysis of G1.9+0.3, constraining its spectral shape, magnetic field, and maximum particle energies, and searches for radioactive titanium emission.
Findings
X-ray emission extends up to 30 keV without morphological change.
Spectral shape fits synchrotron emission with an exponential cutoff.
Maximum electron energy is about 100 TeV in a ~10 μG magnetic field.
Abstract
NuSTAR observed G1.9+0.3, the youngest known supernova remnant in the Milky Way, for 350 ks and detected emission up to 30 keV. The remnant's X-ray morphology does not change significantly across the energy range from 3 to 20 keV. A combined fit between NuSTAR and CHANDRA shows that the spectrum steepens with energy. The spectral shape can be well fitted with synchrotron emission from a power-law electron energy distribution with an exponential cutoff with no additional features. It can also be described by a purely phenomenological model such as a broken power-law or a power-law with an exponential cutoff, though these descriptions lack physical motivation. Using a fixed radio flux at 1 GHz of 1.17 Jy for the synchrotron model, we get a column density of N = cm, a spectral index of , and a roll-off frequency of…
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