Author:
Kueathan A,Luangtip W,Eungwanichayapant A
Abstract
Abstract
Electron/positron pair halo is a physical phenomenon in which the very high energy gamma rays emitted from Blazar interact with cosmic infrared background (CIB) so that produce the electron/positron pairs; the produced electron/positron pairs could up-scatter the cosmic microwave background (CMB) reproducing the gamma-rays, thus these form the cascade process of producing the electron/positron pairs appearing as an halo around the blazar. In case that the halo presents in the ambient strong magnetic field, the electron/positron pairs could emit X-ray light via synchrotron process providing another opportunity to detect the halo. In this work, we search for the X-ray emission from the halo of the Blazar H1426+428 using the observed X-ray data from XMM-Newton observatory. The X-ray spectra of the halo are carefully extracted from the annulus, source free regions around the Blazar to avoid the X-ray contaminations from the Blazar itself and the nearby point sources. These spectra were fitted using the physical model which takes into account the emissions from the unresolved cosmic X-ray and instrument backgrounds. The unresolved flux of ≍ 10–13 erg s–1 cm–2 have been detected in the regions, and we argue that, at least, some fraction of the flux might be the emission from the halo.
Subject
General Physics and Astronomy