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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
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