We report the first detection of a TeV gamma-ray flux from the solar disk
(6.3σ), based on 6.1 years of data from the High Altitude Water
Cherenkov (HAWC) observatory. The 0.5--2.6 TeV spectrum is well fit by a power
law, dN/dE = A(E/1 TeV)−γ, with A=(1.6±0.3)×10−12 TeV−1 cm−2 s−1 and γ=−3.62±0.14. The flux
shows a strong indication of anticorrelation with solar activity. These results
extend the bright, hard GeV emission from the disk observed with Fermi-LAT,
seemingly due to hadronic Galactic cosmic rays showering on nuclei in the solar
atmosphere. However, current theoretical models are unable to explain the
details of how solar magnetic fields shape these interactions. HAWC's TeV
detection thus deepens the mysteries of the solar-disk emission.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures including supplementary material. Accepted for
publication in Physical Review Letter