Supernova Remnants: An Odyssey in Space after Stellar death

Supernova Remnants: An Odyssey in Space after Stellar death

Supernova Remnants: An Odyssey in Space after Stellar death

Thomas

1st Abstract

Title (1st Abstract)

The TeV Morphology of the Interacting Supernova Remnant IC 443

First Author

Brian Humensky

Affiliation

Columbia University

Additional Authors

VERITAS Collaboration

Presentation options

Poster

Session

1. Radiation studies from gamma-rays to radio in Galactic and Extragalactic SNRs

1st Abstract

IC443 is a Galactic supernova remnant (SNR) in which there is clear evidence for the interaction of a dense molecular cloud with the supernova blast wave. This interaction makes the region an excellent laboratory in which to study the connection between particle acceleration and gamma ray emission in SNRs. Previous observations in the GeV to TeV band with MAGIC and VERITAS showed gamma-ray emission coincident with an extended region of interaction between the shock wave and the molecular cloud. At lower energies (MeV to GeV), Fermi-LAT observations have revealed the signature of hadronic emission with its characteristic “pion bump”. Furthermore, observations in other wavelengths such as radio, infrared, optical and X-rays indicate that the environment around the remnant is complex, with a range of different densities. In this new study, with the help of additional data, VERITAS observations have been used to resolve the TeV morphology of IC443 at the few arc-minute scale. We will present results on the gamma-ray morphology and discuss possible sources of the emission, including the shell of the remnant and other gaseous structures in the vicinity.