Search for PeV Gamma-Ray Emission from the Southern Hemisphere with 5 Years of Data from the IceCube Observatory
M. G. Aartsen, M. Ackermann, J. Adams, J. A. Aguilar, M. Ahlers, M., Ahrens, C. Alispach, K. Andeen, T. Anderson, I. Ansseau, G. Anton, C., Arg\"uelles, J. Auffenberg, S. Axani, P. Backes, H. Bagherpour, X. Bai, A., Balagopal V., A. Barbano, S. W. Barwick, B. Bastian, V. Baum

TL;DR
This study searches for PeV gamma-ray emission in the Southern Hemisphere using 5 years of IceCube data, setting the strongest constraints on diffuse and point-like Galactic gamma-ray sources up to 2 PeV.
Contribution
It introduces a combined analysis of IceTop and in-ice IceCube data to improve sensitivity to PeV gamma rays and provides new upper limits on Galactic gamma-ray fluxes.
Findings
No significant PeV gamma-ray signals detected.
Established the most stringent upper limits on diffuse Galactic gamma-ray flux.
Excluded unbroken power-law emission up to 2 PeV for several sources.
Abstract
The measurement of diffuse PeV gamma-ray emission from the Galactic plane would provide information about the energy spectrum and propagation of Galactic cosmic rays, and the detection of a point-like source of PeV gamma rays would be strong evidence for a Galactic source capable of accelerating cosmic rays up to at least a few PeV. This paper presents several un-binned maximum likelihood searches for PeV gamma rays in the Southern Hemisphere using 5 years of data from the IceTop air shower surface detector and the in-ice array of the IceCube Observatory. The combination of both detectors takes advantage of the low muon content and deep shower maximum of gamma-ray air showers, and provides excellent sensitivity to gamma rays between 0.6 PeV and 100 PeV. Our measurements of point-like and diffuse Galactic emission of PeV gamma rays are consistent with background, so we constrain…
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