Crab Nebula: five-year observation with ARGO-YBJ
The ARGO-YBJ Collaboration

TL;DR
This five-year study of the Crab Nebula with ARGO-YBJ provides a detailed gamma-ray spectrum, confirms steady emission over long timescales, and sets limits on short-term flux variability and spectral cutoff energies.
Contribution
First long-term gamma-ray observation of the Crab Nebula with ARGO-YBJ, providing spectral measurements and flux stability analysis over five years.
Findings
Gamma-ray spectrum described by a power law with index 2.63
No significant short-term flux variability detected
Lower limit of spectral cutoff energy is 12 TeV
Abstract
The ARGO-YBJ air shower detector monitored the Crab Nebula gamma ray emission from 2007 November to 2013 February. The integrated signal, consisting of 3.3 10 events,reached the statistical significance of 21.1 standard deviations. The obtained energy spectrum in the energy range 0.3-20 TeV can be described by a power law function dN/dE = I (E / 2 TeV), with a flux normalization I = (5.2 0.2) 10 photons cm s TeV and = 2.63 0.05, corresponding to an integrated flux above 1 TeV of 1.97 10 photons cm s. The systematic error is estimated to be less than 30 for the flux normalization and 0.06 for the spectral index. Assuming a power law spectrum with an exponential cutoff dN/dE = I (E / 2 TeV) (-E / E), the lower limit of the…
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