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Unveiling the high energy Milky Way reveals 'dark accelerators'

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  • Unveiling the high energy Milky Way reveals 'dark accelerators'

    EurekAlert, DC

    Public release date: 24-Mar-2005

    Contact: Julia Maddock
    [email protected]
    44-1-793-442-094
    Particle Physics & Astronomy Research Council

    Unveiling the high energy Milky Way reveals 'dark accelerators'

    In the March 25th 2005 issue of Science Magazine, the High Energy
    Stereoscopic System (H.E.S.S.) team of international astrophysicists,
    including UK astronomers from the University of Durham, report results
    of a first sensitive survey of the central part of our galaxy in
    very high energy (VHE) gamma-rays. Included among the new objects
    discovered are two 'dark accelerators' - mysterious objects that
    are emitting energetic particles, yet apparently have no optical or
    x-ray counterpart.

    This survey reveals a total of eight new sources of VHE gamma-rays
    in the disc of our Galaxy, essentially doubling the number known at
    these energies. The results have pushed astronomy into a previously
    unknown domain, extending our knowledge of the Milky Way in a novel
    wavelength regime thereby opening a new window on our galaxy.

    Gamma-rays are produced in extreme cosmic particle accelerators such
    as supernova explosions and provide a unique view of the high energy
    processes at work in the Milky Way. VHE gamma-ray astronomy is still
    a young field and H.E.S.S. is conducting the first sensitive survey
    at this energy range, finding previously unknown sources.

    Particularly stunning is that two of these new sources discovered
    by H.E.S.S. have no obvious counterparts in more conventional
    wavelength bands such as optical and X-ray astronomy. The discovery
    of VHE gamma-rays from such sources suggests that they may be
    'dark accelerators', as Stefan Funk from the Max-Planck Institut in
    Heidelberg affirms: "These objects seem to only emit radiation in
    the highest energy bands. We had hoped that with a new instrument
    like H.E.S.S. we would detect some new sources, but the success we
    have now exceeds all our expectations."

    Dr Paula Chadwick of the University of Durham adds "Many of the new
    objects seem to be known categories of sources, such as supernova
    remnants and pulsar wind nebulae. Data on these objects will help us
    to understand particle acceleration in our galaxy in more detail; but
    finding these 'dark accelerators' was a surprise. With no counterpart
    at other wavelengths, they are, for the moment, a complete mystery."

    Cosmic particle accelerators are believed to accelerate charged
    particles, such as electrons and ions, by acting on these particles
    with strong shock waves. High-energy gamma rays are secondary products
    of the cosmic accelerators and are easier to detect because they
    travel in straight lines from the source, unlike charged particles
    which are deflected by magnetic fields. The cosmic accelerators are
    usually visible at other wavelengths as well as VHE gamma rays.

    The H.E.S.S. array is ideal for finding these new VHE gamma ray
    objects, because as well as studying objects seen at other wavelengths
    that are expected to be sources of very high energy gamma rays, its
    wide field of view (ten times the diameter of the Moon) means that
    it can survey the sky and discover previously unknown sources.

    Another important discovery is that the new sources appear
    with a typical size of the order of a tenth of a degree; the
    H.E.S.S. instrument for the first time provides sufficient resolution
    and sensitivity to see such structures. Since the objects cluster
    within a fraction of a degree from the plane of our Galaxy, they
    are most likely located at a significant distance - several 1000
    light years from the sun - which implies that these cosmic particle
    accelerators extend over a size of light years.

    The results were obtained using the High Energy Stereoscopic System
    (H.E.S.S.) telescopes in Namibia, in South-West Africa. This system of
    four 13 m diameter telescopes is currently the most sensitive detector
    of VHE gamma-rays, radiation a million million times more energetic
    than the visible light. These high energy gamma rays are quite rare
    - even for relatively strong sources, only about one gamma ray per
    month hits a square meter at the top of the earth's atmosphere. Also,
    since they are absorbed in the atmosphere, a direct detection of a
    significant number of the rare gamma rays would require a satellite
    of huge size. The H.E.S.S. telescopes employ a trick - they use the
    atmosphere as detector medium. When gamma rays are absorbed in the
    air, they emit short flashes of blue light, named Cherenkov light,
    lasting a few billionths of a second. This light is collected by the
    H.E.S.S. telescopes with big mirrors and extremely sensitive cameras
    and can be used to create images of astronomical objects as they
    appear in gamma-rays.

    The H.E.S.S. telescopes represent several years of construction effort
    by an international team of more than 100 scientists and engineers from
    Germany, France, the UK, Ireland, the Czech Republic, Armenia, South
    Africa and the host country Namibia. The instrument was inaugurated
    in September 2004 by the Namibian Prime Minister, Theo-Ben Guirab,
    and its first data have already resulted in a number of important
    discoveries, including the first astronomical image of a supernova
    shock wave at the highest gamma-ray energies.

    ###

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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