Study of TeV shell supernova remnants at gamma-ray energies
F. Acero, M. Lemoine-Goumard, M. Renaud, J. Ballet, J.W. Hewitt, R., Rousseau, and T. Tanaka

TL;DR
Recent Cherenkov telescopes have enabled detailed study of shell supernova remnants emitting in very-high-energy gamma-rays, revealing common characteristics and constraining emission mechanisms through combined VHE and HE data analysis.
Contribution
This study provides the first comprehensive analysis of the high-energy gamma-ray counterparts of two shell SNRs using 6 years of Fermi data, constraining emission models and supporting a leptonic emission scenario.
Findings
No detection of HE gamma-ray emission from HESS J1731-347 and SN 1006.
Upper limits significantly constrain hadronic emission scenarios.
All five studied SNRs exhibit similar gamma-ray luminosities and hard HE spectra.
Abstract
The breakthrough developments of Cherenkov telescopes in the last decade have led to angular resolution of 0.1{\deg} and an unprecedented sensitivity. This has allowed the current generation of Cherenkov telescopes to discover a population of supernova remnants (SNRs) radiating in very-high-energy (VHE, E>100 GeV) gamma-rays. A number of those VHE SNRs exhibit a shell-type morphology spatially coincident with the shock front of the SNR. The members of this VHE shell SNR club are RX J1713.7-3946, Vela Jr, RCW 86, SN 1006, and HESS J1731-347. The latter two objects have been poorly studied in high-energy (HE, 0.1<E<100 GeV) gamma-rays and need to be investigated in order to draw the global picture of this class of SNRs and constrain the characteristics of the underlying population of accelerated particles. Using 6 years of Fermi P7 reprocessed data, we studied the HE counterpart of the…
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