Five years later: VHE emission from the Galactic Center
December 2009

The Galactic Center - Sgr A* - is essentially invisible in the optical, and is only a faint infrared source. It does, however, stand out in very high energy gamma rays. One the first SOMs, exactly five years ago in December 2004, reported the detection of VHE gamma rays from the center of our Galaxy, at the time based on data obtained with the first two H.E.S.S. telescopes during 16 h of observations in 2003. Within the - at the time unprecedented - precision of 30" in RA and Dec, the location of the source HESS J1745-290 was consistent with the Galactic Center, and the spectrum of gamma rays was consistent with a power law. It remained unclear, however, if the gamma rays originate from the vicinity of the supermassive black hole at the Galactic Center, or from a nearby object such as the supernova remnant Sgr A East.
In the five years since then, very high energy gamma ray astronomy has made enormous progress, both regarding regarding the analysis of individual sources and regarding the number of sources - over 100 sources are listed as published or announced by TeVCat in December 2009, about 2/3 of which were discovered by H.E.S.S.
Deeper follow-up observation of the Galactic Center region
revealed a second very high energy gamma ray source - G0.9+0.1 (SOM
2/2005) - as well as a ridge of diffuse emission tracing the gas clouds near
the Galactic Center (SOM
3/2006, see also Fig.1). Using 93 h of data
accumulated in the years 2004, 2005 and 2006, the energy spectrum of the gamma
rays was measured with high precision, revealing a break or cutoff in the
spectrum around 15 TeV (Fig. 2). Towards identifying the
origin of the gamma rays, a multi-year effort was invested aimed at improving
the pointing position of the H.E.S.S. telescopes. Precision pointing of
Cherenkov telescopes is non-trivial. Telescope structures are usually less stiff
than for optical telescopes, and deformations can induce deviations from nominal
pointing of a few 100 arc-seconds. Calibration of pointing suffers from the fact
that there are few gamma-ray sources with well-known position, which are strong
enough such that statistical errors are small. Cherenkov camera with their
relatively course pixels are also poorly suited to use stars for calibration.
Using extra star guider telescopes and CCD cameras which - in special
calibration measurements - observe images of stars on the closed lid of the
photomultiplier camera, systematic errors in the pointing of the H.E.S.S.
telescopes could finally be reduced to 6 arc-seconds in each axis, with a
comparable statistical error - by far the best source location achieved in gamma
rays so far. The thus determined source position is within 8 arc-seconds from
Sgr A*, well consistent with the location of the black hole, but is clearly
inconsistent with the position of the Sgr A East remnant (Fig.
3).
Still, questions about the origin of the gamma rays and
the emission mechanism remain. For example, while the Galactic Center emission
is known to flare in other wavelengths, no such flares are seen in gamma rays;
in fact, the gamma ray flux remained steady during an X-ray flare. It was
pointed out that a pulsar wind nebula very near the Galactic Center, within the
H.E.S.S. error circle, might be responsible for the gamma rays (Hinton
& Aharonian, 2006), explaining the absence of correlated emission. Will it
be possible to improve source location even further, down to the arc-second
level? Technically, this appears very hard to achieve, but one possible way may
be to exploit the "obscuration" of the source by stars orbiting the Galactic
Center, as discussed by Abramowski
et al. (2009).
References: H.E.S.S. publications on the Galactic Center: F.
Aharonian et al., "H.E.S.S. observations of the Galactic Center region and their
possible dark matter interpretation",
Phys. Rev. Lett. 97
(2006) 221102 and
astro-ph/0610509; F. Aharonian et al., "Simultaneous HESS and Chandra
observations of Sagitarius A* during an X-ray flare",
Astron. Astrophys. 492
(2008) L25-L28 and arXiv:0812.3762;
F. Aharonian et al., "Spectrum and variability of the Galactic Center VHE
gamma-ray source HESS J1745-290",
Astron. Astrophys. 503
(2009) 817-825 and
arXiv:0906.1247; F. Acero et al., H.E.S.S. Collaboration, "Localising
the VHE gamma-ray source at the Galactic Centre",
arXiv:0911.1912 and MNRAS, in
press.