The high-energy emission from HD 93129A near periastron

Del Palacio, S., García, F., Altamirano, D., Barba, R. H., Bosch Ramón, V., Corcoran, M., De Becker, M., Hamaguchi, K., Apellaniz, J. M., Adrover, P. M., Paredes, J. M., Romero, G. E., Sana, H., Tavani, M., Ud Doula, A. (2020). The high-energy emission from HD 93129A near periastron. Monthly Notices of teh Royal Astronomical Society, 494, 4, 6043-6052 DOI: 10.1093/mnras/staa1156

We conducted an observational campaign towards one of the most massive and luminous colliding wind binaries in the Galaxy, HD 93129A, close to its periastron passage in 2018. During this time the source was predicted to be in its maximum of high-energy emission. Here we present our data analysis from the X-ray satellites Chandra and NuSTAR and the gamma-ray satellite AGILE. High-energy emission coincident with HD 93129A was detected in the X-ray band up to similar to 18 keV, whereas in the gamma-ray band only upper limits were obtained. We interpret the derived fluxes using a non-thermal radiative model for the wind-collision region. We establish a conservative upper limit for the fraction of the wind kinetic power that is converted into relativistic electron acceleration, f(NT,e) < 0.02. In addition, we set a lower limit for the magnetic field in the wind-collision region as B-WCR > 0.3 G. We also argue a putative interpretation of the emission from which we estimate f(NT,e) approximate to 0.006 and B-WCR approximate to 0.5 G. We conclude that multiwavelength, dedicated observing campaigns during carefully selected epochs are a powerful tool for characterizing the relativistic particle content and magnetic field intensity in colliding wind binaries.

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