The Eel Pulsar Wind Nebula: a PeVatron-Candidate Origin for HAWC J1826-128 and HESS J1826-130
Daniel A. Burgess, Kaya Mori, Joseph D. Gelfand, Charles J. Hailey,, Yarone M. Tokayer, Jooyun Woo, Hongjun An, Kelly Malone, Stephen P. Reynolds,, Samar Safi-Harb, and Tea Temim

TL;DR
This study identifies the Eel pulsar wind nebula as a potential PeVatron, capable of accelerating particles to PeV energies, based on multi-wavelength observations and spectral modeling, suggesting a leptonic origin for the TeV gamma-ray emission.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive multi-wavelength analysis and modeling of the Eel PWN, establishing it as a candidate PeVatron with a low magnetic field and young pulsar age.
Findings
The Eel PWN exhibits a leptonic origin of TeV emission.
The PWN has a low magnetic field of about 1 μG.
The pulsar is approximately 5.7 kyr old, younger than its characteristic age.
Abstract
HAWC J1826-128 is one of the brightest Galactic TeV gamma-ray sources detected by the High Altitude Water Cherenkov (HAWC) Observatory, with photon energies extending up to nearly 100 TeV. This HAWC source spatially coincides with the H.E.S.S. TeV source HESS J1826-130 and the "Eel" pulsar wind nebula (PWN), which is associated with the GeV pulsar PSR J1826-1256. In the X-ray band, Chandra and XMM-Newton revealed that the Eel PWN is composed of both a compact nebula (15") and diffuse X-ray emission (6'2') extending away from the pulsar. Our NuSTAR observation detected hard X-ray emission from the compact PWN up to 20 keV and evidence of the synchrotron burn-off effect. In addition to the spatial coincidence between HESS J1826-130 and the diffuse X-ray PWN, our multi-wavelength spectral energy distribution (SED) analysis using X-ray and gamma-ray data…
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