A deep spectromorphological study of the $\gamma$-ray emission surrounding the young massive stellar cluster Westerlund 1
F. Aharonian, H. Ashkar, M. Backes, V. Barbosa Martins, Y. Becherini,, D. Berge, B. Bi, M. B\"ottcher, M. de Bony de Lavergne, F. Bradascio, R., Brose, F. Brun, T. Bulik, C. Burger-Scheidlin, F. Cangemi, S. Caroff, S., Casanova, M. Cerruti, T. Chand, S. Chandra, A. Chen

TL;DR
This study uses extensive gamma-ray observations to analyze the morphology and spectrum of emission around Westerlund 1, providing insights into cosmic ray acceleration in massive stellar clusters.
Contribution
It presents a detailed spectromorphological analysis of gamma-ray emission near Westerlund 1, linking it to the cluster and exploring potential cosmic ray acceleration mechanisms.
Findings
Large-scale gamma-ray emission with shell-like structure
Uniform energy spectrum extending to tens of TeV
No significant correlation with gas clouds
Abstract
Young massive stellar clusters are extreme environments and potentially provide the means for efficient particle acceleration. Indeed, they are increasingly considered as being responsible for a significant fraction of cosmic rays (CRs) accelerated within the Milky Way. Westerlund 1, the most massive known young stellar cluster in our Galaxy is a prime candidate for studying this hypothesis. While the very-high-energy -ray source HESS J1646-458 has been detected in the vicinity of Westerlund 1 in the past, its association could not be firmly identified. We aim to identify the physical processes responsible for the -ray emission around Westerlund 1 and thus to better understand the role of massive stellar clusters in the acceleration of Galactic CRs. Using 164 hours of data recorded with the High Energy Stereoscopic System (H.E.S.S.), we carried out a deep…
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.
