7–11 Aug 2017
Columbus, Ohio, USA
US/Eastern timezone

A hadronic origin of the high-energy gamma rays from LMC

8 Aug 2017, 14:45
15m
Corinthian Room (The Athenaeum)

Corinthian Room

The Athenaeum

Oral Gamma rays Gamma rays

Speaker

Dr Qingwen Tang (Nanchang University & CCAPP)

Description

It has been suggested that high-energy gamma-ray emission ($>$100MeV ) of nearby star-forming galaxies may be produced predominantly by cosmic rays colliding with the interstellar medium through neutral pion decay. The pion-decay mechanism predicts a unique spectral signature in the gamma-ray spectrum, characterized by a fast rising spectrum and a spectral break below a few hundreds of MeV. We here report the evidence of a spectral break around 500 MeV in the disk emission of Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), which is found in the analysis of the gamma-ray data extending down to 60 MeV observed by {\it Fermi}-Large Area Telescope. The break is well consistent with the pion-decay model for the gamma-ray emission, although leptonic models, such as the electron bremsstrahlung emission, cannot be ruled out completely.

Primary authors

Dr Qingwen Tang (Nanchang University & CCAPP) Dr Ruoyu Liu (Max-Planck-Institut f\"ur Kernphysik) Prof. Xiangyu Wang (Nanjing University)

Presentation materials