NuSTAR discovery of the hard X-ray emission and a wide-band X-ray spectrum from the Pictor A western hot spot
Yuji Sunada, Arisa Morimoto, Makoto S. Tashiro, Yukikatsu Terada,, Satoru Katsuda, Kosuke Sato, Dai Tateishi, Nobuaki Sasaki

TL;DR
This study reports the first detection of hard X-ray emission above 10 keV from the western hot spot of Pictor A, revealing a broad spectrum consistent with synchrotron radiation and supporting diffusive shock acceleration models.
Contribution
First detection of hard X-ray emission above 10 keV from a jet termination hot spot of an active galactic nucleus, extending the known X-ray spectrum and constraining electron acceleration processes.
Findings
Hard X-ray emission detected at 30 sigma in 3-20 keV band by NuSTAR.
The wide-band spectrum is a single power-law with photon index 2.07.
Maximum electron energy estimated to be at least 40 TeV.
Abstract
Utilizing \textit{Chandra}, \textit{XMM-Newton} and \textit{NuSTAR}, a wide-band X-ray spectrum through 0.2 to 20 keV is reported from the western hot spot of Pictor A. In particular, the X-ray emission is significantly detected in the 3 to 20 keV band at 30 sigma by \textit{NuSTAR}. This is the first detection of hard X-rays with energies above 10 keV from a jet termination hot spot of active galactic nuclei. The hard X-ray spectrum is well described with a power-law model with a photon index of , and the flux is obtained to be erg s cm in the 3 to 20 keV band. The obtained spectrum is smoothly connected with those soft X-ray spectra observed by \textit{Chandra} and \textit{XMM-Newton}. The wide-band spectrum shows a single power-law spectrum with a photon index of , excluding any…
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