H.E.S.S. and Fermi-LAT observations of PSR B1259-63/LS 2883 during its 2014 and 2017 periastron passages
H.E.S.S. Collaboration, H. Abdalla, R. Adam, F. Aharonian, F. Ait, Benkhali, E.O. Ang\"uner, M. Arakawa, C. Arcaro, C. Armand, H. Ashkar, M., Backes, V. Barbosa Martins, M. Barnard, Y. Becherini, D. Berge, K., Bernl\"ohr, R. Blackwell, M. B\"ottcher, C. Boisson, J. Bolmont

TL;DR
This study characterizes gamma-ray emissions from PSR B1259-63/LS 2883 during 2014 and 2017 periastron passages, revealing detailed light curves, spectral features, and variability patterns across HE and VHE gamma-ray regimes.
Contribution
First simultaneous analysis of H.E.S.S. and Fermi-LAT data during two periastron passages, providing new insights into gamma-ray emission mechanisms and variability in this binary system.
Findings
Double-peak VHE light curve with asymmetric peaks
Detection of HE gamma-ray flares before and after periastron
Spectral similarity across energy regimes with different physical origins
Abstract
PSR B1259-63/LS 2883 is a gamma-ray binary system consisting of a pulsar in an eccentric orbit around a bright Oe stellar-type companion star that features a dense circumstellar disc. The high- and very-high-energy (HE, VHE) gamma-ray emission from PSR B1259-63/LS 2883 around the times of its periastron passage are characterised, in particular, at the time of the HE gamma-ray flares reported to have occurred in 2011, 2014, and 2017. Spectra and light curves were derived from observations conducted with the H.E.S.S.-II array in 2014 and 2017. A local double-peak profile with asymmetric peaks in the VHE light curve is measured, with a flux minimum at the time of periastron and two peaks coinciding with the times at which the neutron star crosses the companion's circumstellar disc ( d). A high VHE gamma-ray flux is also observed at the times of the HE gamma-ray…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
