Discovery of a new γ-ray source LHAASO J0341+5258 with emission up to 200TeV
Abstract
We report the discovery of a new unidentified extended γ-ray source in the Galactic plane named LHAASO J0341+5258 with a pre-trial significance of 8.2 standard deviations above 25 TeV. The best fit position is R.A.=55.340.11 and Dec=52.970.07. The angular size of LHAASO J0341+5258 is 0.29 0.06stat 0.02sys. The flux above 25 TeV is about 20\% of the flux of Crab Nebula. Although a power-law fit of the spectrum from 10 TeV to 200 TeV with the photon index α=2.98 0.19stat 0.02sys is not excluded, the LHAASO data together with the flux upper limit at 10 GeV set by the Fermi LAT observation, indicate a noticeable steepening of an initially hard power-law spectrum %(α ≤ 1.75) spectrum with a cutoff at ≈ 50 TeV. We briefly discuss the origin of UHE gamma-rays. The lack of an energetic pulsar and a young SNR inside or in the vicinity of LHAASO J0341+5258 challenge, but do not exclude both the leptonic and hadronic scenarios of gamma-ray production.
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