H.E.S.S. observations of the 2021 periastron passage of PSR B1259-63/LS 2883

Abstract

PSR B1259-63 is a gamma-ray binary system that hosts a pulsar in an eccentric orbit, with a 3.4 year period, around an O9.5Ve star. At orbital phases close to periastron passages, the system radiates bright and variable non-thermal emission. We report on an extensive VHE observation campaign conducted with the High Energy Stereoscopic System, comprised of ~100 hours of data taken from tp24t_p-24 days to tp+127t_p+127 days around the system's 2021 periastron passage. We also present the timing and spectral analyses of the source. The VHE light curve in 2021 is consistent with the stacked light curve of all previous observations. Within the light curve, we report a VHE maximum at times coincident with the third X-ray peak first detected in the 2021 X-ray light curve. In the light curve -- although sparsely sampled in this time period -- we see no VHE enhancement during the second disc crossing. In addition, we see no correspondence to the 2021 GeV flare in the VHE light curve. The VHE spectrum obtained from the analysis of the 2021 dataset is best described by a power law of spectral index Γ=2.65±0.04stat\Gamma = 2.65 \pm 0.04_{\text{stat}} ±0.04sys\pm 0.04_{\text{sys}}, a value consistent with the previous H.E.S.S. observations of the source. We report spectral variability with a difference of ΔΓ=0.56 ± 0.18stat\Delta \Gamma = 0.56 ~\pm~ 0.18_{\text{stat}}  ± 0.10sys~\pm~0.10_{\text{sys}} at 95% c.l., between sub-periods of the 2021 dataset. We also find a linear correlation between contemporaneous flux values of X-ray and TeV datasets, detected mainly after tp+25t_p+25 days, suggesting a change in the available energy for non-thermal radiation processes. We detect no significant correlation between GeV and TeV flux points, within the uncertainties of the measurements, from tp23\sim t_p-23 days to tp+126\sim t_p+126 days. This suggests that the GeV and TeV emission originate from different electron populations.Comment: accepted to A&

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