HESS J1741-302: a hidden accelerator in the Galactic plane
H.E.S.S. Collaboration: H. Abdalla, A. Abramowski, F. Aharonian, F., Ait Benkhali, E.O. Ang\"uner, M. Arakawa, C. Armand, M. Arrieta, M. Backes,, A. Balzer, M. Barnard, Y. Becherini, J. Becker Tjus, D. Berge, S. Bernhard,, K. Bernl\"ohr, R. Blackwell, M. B\"ottcher, C. Boisson

TL;DR
HESS J1741-302 is a newly discovered, steady, and weak VHE gamma-ray source in the Galactic plane, with potential origins including hadronic, leptonic, or binary scenarios, and remains unidentified despite extensive observations.
Contribution
This study presents the discovery and detailed analysis of HESS J1741-302, revealing its spectral properties, spatial constraints, and possible emission mechanisms, which are novel for an unidentified VHE gamma-ray source.
Findings
Steady TeV emission extending up to 10 TeV without cut-off.
Source compatible with a point source, extension below 0.068°.
Possible origins include hadronic, leptonic, or binary scenarios.
Abstract
The H.E.S.S. collaboration has discovered a new very high energy (VHE, E 0.1 TeV) -ray source, HESS J1741-302, located in the Galactic plane. Despite several attempts to constrain its nature, no plausible counterpart has been found so far at X-ray and MeV/GeV -ray energies, and the source remains unidentified. An analysis of 145-hour of observations of HESS J1741-302 at VHEs has revealed a steady and relatively weak TeV source (1 of the Crab Nebula flux), with a spectral index of = 2.3 0.2 0.2, extending to energies up to 10 TeV without any clear signature of a cut-off. In a hadronic scenario, such a spectrum implies an object with particle acceleration up to energies of several hundred TeV. Contrary to most H.E.S.S. unidentified sources, the angular size of HESS J1741-302 is compatible with the H.E.S.S.…
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