VERITAS Observations of the Galactic Center Region at Multi-TeV Gamma-Ray Energies
C. B. Adams, W. Benbow, A. Brill, R. Brose, M. Buchovecky, M. Capasso,, J. L. Christiansen, A. J. Chromey, M. K. Daniel, M. Errando, A. Falcone, Q., Feng, J. P. Finley, L. Fortson, A. Furniss, A. Gent, G. H. Gillanders, C., Giuri, D. Hanna, O. Hervet, J. Holder, G. Hughes

TL;DR
This paper reports on VERITAS observations of the Galactic Center at multi-TeV energies, revealing detailed spectra and evidence of cosmic ray acceleration, including the detection of a central source and diffuse emission along the GC ridge.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed spectral analysis of the central source Sagittarius A* and diffuse emission in the Galactic Center at energies above 2 TeV, indicating potential PeV cosmic ray acceleration.
Findings
Detection of the central source VER J1745-290 at 38σ significance.
Diffuse emission along the GC ridge with no cutoff up to 40 TeV.
Spectral evidence supporting the presence of a PeV cosmic ray accelerator.
Abstract
The Galactic Center (GC) region hosts a variety of powerful astronomical sources and rare astrophysical processes that emit a large flux of non-thermal radiation. The inner 375 pc x 600 pc region, called the Central Molecular Zone, is home to the supermassive black hole Sagittarius A*, massive cloud complexes, and particle accelerators such as supernova remnants. We present the results of our improved analysis of the very-high-energy (VHE) gamma-ray emission above 2 TeV from the GC using 125 hours of data taken with the VERITAS imaging-atmospheric Cherenkov telescope between 2010 and 2018. The central source VER J1745-290, consistent with the position of Sagittarius A*, is detected at a significance of 38 standard deviations above the background level , and we report its spectrum and light curve. Its differential spectrum is consistent with a power law with exponential…
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