Resolving acceleration to very high energies along the Jet of Centaurus A
The 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 paper presents TeV energy observations of Centaurus A's jet, providing evidence for ultra-relativistic electron acceleration and supporting the synchrotron origin of X-ray emissions over inverse Compton models.
Contribution
The study offers the first resolved TeV observations of Cen A's large-scale jet, highlighting ongoing electron acceleration and favoring synchrotron processes for X-ray emission.
Findings
Resolved large-scale jet at TeV energies.
Evidence for ultra-relativistic electron acceleration.
Supports synchrotron origin of X-ray emission.
Abstract
The nearby radio galaxy Centaurus A belongs to a class of Active Galaxies that are very luminous at radio wavelengths. The majority of these galaxies show collimated relativistic outflows known as jets, that extend over hundreds of thousands of parsecs for the most powerful sources. Accretion of matter onto the central super-massive black hole is believed to fuel these jets and power their emission, with the radio emission being related to the synchrotron radiation of relativistic electrons in magnetic fields. The origin of the extended X-ray emission seen in the kiloparsec-scale jets from these sources is still a matter of debate, although Cen A's X-ray emission has been suggested to originate in electron synchrotron processes. The other possible explanation is Inverse Compton (IC) scattering with CMB soft photons. Synchrotron radiation needs ultra-relativistic electrons (…
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