The $\gamma$-ray spectrum of the core of Centaurus A as observed with H.E.S.S. and Fermi-LAT
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
This study combines H.E.S.S. and Fermi-LAT observations to produce the first contemporaneous gamma-ray spectrum of Centaurus A's core over nearly five orders of magnitude in energy, revealing spectral features that challenge simple models.
Contribution
It provides the first simultaneous, broad-energy gamma-ray spectrum of Cen A's core, showing spectral hardening and VHE detection, indicating a new emission component beyond single-zone SSC models.
Findings
Detection of the core in VHE range with 12σ significance
Spectrum in 250 GeV-6 TeV range fits a power-law with index 2.52
Evidence of spectral hardening above 2.8 GeV at 4σ level
Abstract
Centaurus A (Cen A) is the nearest radio galaxy discovered as a very-high-energy (VHE; 100 GeV-100 TeV) -ray source by the High Energy Stereoscopic System (H.E.S.S.). It is a faint VHE -ray emitter, though its VHE flux exceeds both the extrapolation from early Fermi-LAT observations as well as expectations from a (misaligned) single-zone synchrotron-self Compton (SSC) description. The latter satisfactorily reproduces the emission from Cen A at lower energies up to a few GeV. New observations with H.E.S.S., comparable in exposure time to those previously reported, were performed and eight years of Fermi-LAT data were accumulated to clarify the spectral characteristics of the -ray emission from the core of Cen A. The results allow us for the first time to achieve the goal of constructing a representative, contemporaneous -ray core spectrum of Cen A over…
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