Unveiling the origin of HESS J1809-193
G. Castelletti, E. Giacani, A. Petriella

TL;DR
This study investigates the origin of gamma-ray emissions from HESS J1809-193 by analyzing new radio, molecular, and atomic data, revealing a likely hadronic origin linked to supernova remnant G11.0-0.0 and nearby molecular clouds.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed radio imaging of the region and establishes a physical connection between the supernova remnant and molecular clouds as the gamma-ray source.
Findings
No radio counterpart to the X-ray pulsar wind nebula was detected.
A system of molecular clouds is coincident with the TeV source.
The gamma-ray emission likely results from hadronic interactions involving SNR shock-accelerated ions.
Abstract
The main goal of this paper is to provide new insights on the origin of the observable flux of gamma rays from HESS J1809-193 using new high-quality observations in the radio domain. We used the Expanded Very Large Array (now known as the Karl G. Jansky Very large Array, JVLA) to produce a deep full-synthesis imaging at 1.4 GHz of the vicinity of PSR J1809-1917. These data were used in conjunction with 12CO observations from the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope in the transition line J=3-2 and atomic hydrogen data from the Southern Galactic Plane Survey to investigate the properties of the interstellar medium in the direction of the source HESS J1809-193. The new radio continuum image, obtained with a synthesized beam of 8"x4" and a sensitivity of 0.17 mJy/beam, reveals with unprecedented detail all the intensity structures in the field. No radio counterpart to the observed X-ray emission…
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