LMC N132D: A mature supernova remnant with a power-law gamma-ray spectrum extending beyond 8 TeV

Abstract

Context. Supernova remnants (SNRs) are commonly thought to be the dominant sources of Galactic cosmic rays up to the knee of the cosmic-ray spectrum at a few PeV. Imaging Atmospheric Cherenkov Telescopes have revealed young SNRs as very-high-energy (VHE, >100 GeV) gamma-ray sources, but for only a few SNRs the hadronic cosmic-ray origin of their gamma-ray emission is indisputably established. In all these cases, the gamma-ray spectra exhibit a spectral cutoff at energies much below 100 TeV and thus do not reach the PeVatron regime.

Aims. The aim of this work was to achieve a firm detection for the oxygen-rich SNR LMC N132D in the VHE gamma-ray domain with an extended set of data, and to clarify the spectral characteristics and the localization of the gamma-ray emission from this exceptionally powerful gamma-ray-emitting SNR.

Methods. We analyzed 252 h of High Energy Stereoscopic System (H.E.S.S.) observations towards SNR N132D that were accumulated between December 2004 and March 2016 during a deep survey of the Large Magellanic Cloud, adding 104 h of observations to the previously published data set to ensure a > 5σ detection. To broaden the gamma-ray spectral coverage required for modeling the spectral energy distribution, an analysis of Fermi-LAT Pass 8 data was also included.

Results. We unambiguously detect N132D at VHE with a significance of 5.7σ. We report the results of a detailed analysis of its spectrum and localization based on the extended H.E.S.S. data set. The joint analysis of the extended H.E.S.S and Fermi-LAT data results in a spectral energy distribution in the energy range from 1.7 GeV to 14.8 TeV, which suggests a high luminosity of N132D at GeV and TeV energies. We set a lower limit on a gamma-ray cutoff energy of 8 TeV with a confidence level of 95%. The new gamma-ray spectrum as well as multiwavelength observations of N132D when compared to physical models suggests a hadronic origin of the VHE gamma-ray emission.

Conclusions. SNR N132D is a VHE gamma-ray source that shows a spectrum extending to the VHE domain without a spectral cutoff at a few TeV, unlike the younger oxygen-rich SNR Cassiopeia A. The gamma-ray emission is best explained by a dominant hadronic component formed by diffusive shock acceleration. The gamma-ray properties of N132D may be affected by an interaction with a nearby molecular cloud that partially lies inside the 95% confidence region of the source position.

Auxiliary informations

Figure 1

The fits file corresponding to the H.E.S.S. excess map shown in Figure 1 of the paper:


[FITS]

Figure 2

The fits file corresponding to the smoothed Fermi-LAT count map shown in Figure 2 of the paper:


[FITS]

Figure 3 and 4

The H.E.S.S. and Fermi-LAT spectral points shown in Figures 3 and 4 of the paper:


Energy
[TeV]
Flux
[1/ (cm2 s TeV)]
Flux Error_low
[1/ (cm2 s TeV)]
Flux Error_high
[1/ (cm2 s TeV)]

1.73e-3 4.25e-08 3.54e-08 3.54e-08
5.20e-3 6.30e-09 3.28e-09 3.28e-09
15.6e-3 1.41e-09 5.37e-10 5.37e-10
83.0e-3 4.12e-11 2.68e-11 2.68e-11
1.47 6.47e-14 2.67e-14 2.43e-14
2.35 1.27e-14 5.24e-15 4.97e-15
4.97 5.32e-15 1.46e-15 1.37e-15
15.17 1.87e-16 1.09e-16 9.89e-17

Figure 6

The 2-sigma and 3-sigma significance contours of the best-fit position as derived using the ON counts map, background map (Alpha map times OFF map), and exposure map, and the H.E.S.S. point spread function shown in Figure 6 of the paper:


[CTR]