1,878 research outputs found
HESS J1641-463, a very hard spectrum TeV gamma-ray source in the Galactic plane
HESS J1641-463 is a unique source discovered by the High Energy Stereoscopic
System (H.E.S.S.) telescope array in the multi-TeV domain. The source had been
previously hidden in the extended tail of emission from the bright nearby
source HESS J1640-465. However, the analysis of the very-high-energy (VHE) data
from the region at energies above 4 TeV revealed this new source at a
significance level of 8.5. HESS J1641-463 showed a moderate flux level
F(E > 1 TeV) = (3.64 +/- 0.44_stat +/- 0.73_sys) 10^-13 cm^-2s^-1,
corresponding to 1.8% of the Crab Nebula flux above the same energy, and a hard
spectrum with a photon index Gamma = 2.07 +/- 0.1_stat +/- 0.20_sys. The light
curve was investigated for evidence of variability, but none was found on both
short (28-min observation) and long (yearly) timescales. HESS J1641-463 is
positionally coincident with the radio supernova remnant (SNR) G338.5+0.1.
There is no clear X-ray counterpart of the SNR, although Chandra and XMM-Newton
data reveal some weak emission that may be associated. If the emission from
HESS J1641-463 is produced by cosmic ray protons colliding with the ambient
gas, then the proton spectrum extends up to 0.1 PeV (99% confidence level) and
likely to higher energies, > 0.27 PeV (90% confidence level). If this is the
case, then HESS J1641-463 may be a member of a larger source population
contributing to the Galactic cosmic-ray flux around the knee.Comment: In Proceedings of the 34th International Cosmic Ray Conference
(ICRC2015), The Hague, The Netherland
Estimating the Leverage Parameter of Continuous-time Stochastic Volatility Models Using High Frequency S&P 500 VIX
This paper proposes a new method for estimating continuous-time stochastic volatility (SV) models for the S&P 500 stock index process using intraday high-frequency observations of both the S&P 500 index and the Chicago Board of Exchange (CBOE) implied (or expected) volatility index (VIX). Intraday high-frequency observations data have become readily available for an increasing number of financial assets and their derivatives in recent years, but it is well known that attempts to estimate the parameters of popular continuous-time models can lead to nonsensical estimates due to severe intraday seasonality. A primary purpose of the paper is to estimate the leverage parameter, , that is, the correlation between the two Brownian motions driving the diffusive components of the price process and its spot variance process, respectively. We show that, under the special case of Heston’s (1993) square-root SV model without measurement errors, the “realized leverage”, or the realized covariation of the price and VIX processes divided by the product of the realized volatilities of the two processes, converges to in probability as the time intervals between observations shrink to zero, even if the length of the whole sample period is fixed. Finite sample simulation results show that the proposed estimator delivers accurate estimates of the leverage parameter, unlike existing methods
Very high energy emission from the hard spectrum sources HESS J1641-463, HESS J1741-302 and HESS J1826-130
A recent study of the diffuse -ray emission in the Central Molecular
Zone using very high energy (VHE, E 0.1 TeV) H.E.S.S. data suggests that
the Galactic Center (GC) is the most plausible supplier of Galactic
ultra-relativistic cosmic-rays (CRs) up to the knee at about 10 eV
(PeV). However, the GC might not be the only source capable to accelerate CRs
up to PeV energies in the Galaxy. Here we present H.E.S.S. data analysis
results and interpretation of three H.E.S.S. sources, with spectra extending
beyond 10 TeV and relatively hard spectral indices compared with the average
spectral index of H.E.S.S. sources, namely HESS J1641-463, HESS J1741-302 and
HESS J1826-130. Although the nature of these VHE -ray sources is still
open, their spectra suggest that the astrophysical objects producing such
emission must be capable of accelerating the parental particle population up to
energies of at least several hundreds of TeV. Assuming a hadronic scenario,
dense gas regions can provide rich target material for accelerated particles to
produce VHE -ray emission via proton-proton interactions followed by a
subsequent decay. Thus, detailed investigations of the interstellar
medium along the line of sight to all of these sources have been performed by
using data from available atomic and molecular hydrogen surveys. The results
point out the existence of dense interstellar gas structures coincident with
the best fit positions of these sources. One can find possible hadronic models
with CRs being accelerated close to the PeV energies to explain the
-ray emission from all of these sources, which opens up the possibility
that a population of PeV CR accelerators might be active in the Galaxy.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, in Proceedings of 35th ICRC, Busan (Korea) 201
HESS J1826130: A Very Hard -Ray Spectrum Source in the Galactic Plane
HESS J1826130 is an unidentified hard spectrum source discovered by
H.E.S.S. along the Galactic plane, the spectral index being = 1.6 with
an exponential cut-off at about 12 TeV. While the source does not have a clear
counterpart at longer wavelengths, the very hard spectrum emission at TeV
energies implies that electrons or protons accelerated up to several hundreds
of TeV are responsible for the emission. In the hadronic case, the VHE emission
can be produced by runaway cosmic-rays colliding with the dense molecular
clouds spatially coincident with the H.E.S.S. source.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, Proceedings of the 6th International Symposium on
High Energy Gamma-Ray Astronomy (Gamma2016), Heidelberg, German
Discovery of the VHE gamma-ray source HESS J1641-463
A new TeV source, HESS J1641-463, has been serendipitously discovered in the
Galactic plane by the High Energy Stereoscopic System (H.E.S.S.) at a
significance level of 8.6 standard deviations. The observations of HESS
J1641-463 were performed between 2004 and 2011 and the source has a moderate
flux level of 1.7% of the Crab Nebula flux at E > 1 TeV. HESS J1641-463 has a
rather hard photon index of 1.99 +- 0.13_stat +- 0.20_sys. HESS J1641-463 is
positionally coincident with the radio supernova remnant SNR G338.5+0.1, but no
clear X-ray counterpart has been found in archival Chandra observations of the
region. Different possible VHE production scenarios will be discussed in this
contribution.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, 2012 Fermi Symposium proceedings - eConf C12102
Correlating Fermi gamma-ray sources with ultra-high energy cosmic rays
The origin of ultra-high energy cosmic rays (UHECRs) is one of the enduring
mysteries of high-energy astrophysics. To investigate this, we cross-correlate
the recently released Fermi Large Area Telescope First Source Catalog (1FGL)
with the public sample of UHECRs made available by the Pierre Auger
collaboration. Of the 27 UHECRs in the sample, we find 12 events that arrived
within 3.1 degrees of Fermi sources. However, we find similar or larger number
of matches in 63 out of 100 artificial UHECR samples constructed using
positions randomly drawn from the BATSE 4B catalog of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs)
collected from 1991 until 1996. Based on our analysis, we find no evidence that
UHECRs are associated with Fermi sources. We conclude with some remarks about
the astrophysical origin of cosmic rays.Comment: Revised version that considers a smaller deflection angle for UHECRs
(3.1 degrees) and a declination range for the artificial samples that extends
to decl.= +24.8 in response to the referee comments. 4 pages, 2 figures,
submitted to MNRA
MWL observations of VHE blazars in 2006
In 2006 the MAGIC telescope observed the well known very high energy (VHE, >
80 GeV) blazars Mrk 421 and Mrk 501 in the course of multi-wavelength
campaigns, comprising measurements in the optical, X-ray and VHE regime. MAGIC
performed additional snapshot observations on Mrk 421 around the MWL campaigns
and detected the source each night with high significance, establishing once
more flux variability on nightly scales for this object. For certain nights,
the integral flux exceeded the one of Crab significantly, whereas the truly
simultaneous observations have been conducted in a rather low flux state. The
MAGIC observations contemporaneous to XMM-Newton revealed clear intra-night
variability. No significant correlation between the spectral index and the flux
could be found for the nine days of observations. The VHE observations of Mrk
501 have been conducted during one of the lowest flux states ever measured by
MAGIC for this object. The VHE and optical light curves do not show significant
variability, whereas the flux in X-rays increased by about 50 %. In this
contribution, the results of the MAGIC observations will be presented in
detail.Comment: Contribution to the 31st ICRC, Lodz, Poland, July 200
- …
