An in-depth study of Gamma rays from the Starburst Galaxy M 82 with VERITAS
Atreya Acharyya, Colin B. Adams, Priyadarshini Bangale, Joshua T., Bartkoske, Wystan Benbow, Yu Chen, Jodi L. Christiansen, Alisha J. Chromey,, Anne Duerr, Manel Errando, Miguel E. Godoy, Abe Falcone, Sydney Feldman, Qi, Feng, Juniper Foote, Lucy Fortson, Amy Furniss

TL;DR
This study presents a detailed analysis of very-high-energy gamma-ray emission from the starburst galaxy M 82 using VERITAS, revealing a significant detection and insights into cosmic-ray processes.
Contribution
It provides the most statistically significant VERITAS measurement of VHE gamma rays from M 82 and models the emission with a lepto-hadronic scenario, advancing understanding of cosmic-ray interactions in starburst galaxies.
Findings
VHE gamma-ray emission detected at ~6.5σ significance
Photon spectrum fits a power law with index 2.3
Lepto-hadronic model explains the gamma-ray SED
Abstract
Assuming Galactic cosmic rays originate in supernovae and the winds of massive stars, starburst galaxies should produce very-high-energy (VHE; E100 GeV) gamma-ray emission via the interaction of their copious quantities of cosmic rays with the large reservoirs of dense gas within the galaxies. Such VHE emission was detected by VERITAS from the starburst galaxy M 82 in 2008-09. An extensive, multi-year campaign followed these initial observations, yielding a total of 254 h of good quality VERITAS data on M 82. Leveraging modern analysis techniques and the larger exposure, these VERITAS data show a more statistically significant VHE signal (6.5 standard deviations ()). The corresponding photon spectrum is well fit by a power law () and the observed integral flux is F(450 GeV) = $(3.2 \pm0.6_{stat} \pm 0.6_{sys}) \times…
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