Low-energy gamma-ray sources observed by the MISO telescope

Il Nuovo Cimento C(1984)

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摘要
Summary  The MISO telescope is a gamma-ray detector operating in the (0.1÷20) MeV energy range. This instrument was flown success-fully from Palestine, Texas (U.S.A.) in May 1977, October 1978, September 1979 and May 1980. During the four flights, the telescope observed a number of galactic and extragalactic sources. The Crab Nebula was detected in 1980 and its spectrum was measured up to 2 MeV. Cygnus X-1 was observed in 1979 and 1980 and was found to be in different hard X-ray states on each occasion: in a superlow state in 1979 and in a low state in 1980. The COS-B high-energy (E>50 MeV) gamma-ray sources CG 135+1 (1978) and CG 195+4 (1978) were also observed by the same instrument. From the region containing CG 135+1 a 5σ excess was measured in the counting rate of the telescope above 120 keV. No statistically significant low-energy gamma-ray flux was detected from CG 195+4. The Seyfert galaxies NCG 4151 (1977, 1979, 1980), and MCG 8-11-11 (1979), the BL LAC object MK 501 (1979) and the «peculiar» galaxy NGC 1275 (1979) were also searched for gamma-ray emission. The data on NGC 4151 and MCG 8-11-11 are consistent with power law spectra having photon indices α∼1 in the (0.1÷3) MeV energy range. Above this energy, the MISO and SAS-2/COS-B measurements require spectral breaks to α≥3. Upper limits were obtained on the emission from both MK 501 and NGC 1275.
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gamma ray,power law,peculiar galaxies,spectrum,statistical significance
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