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Observation Date (UT) Observation Lat

Canonical Name:Kookaburra (Rabbit)
TeVCat Name:TeV J1418-609
Other Names:G313.3+0.1,
HESS J1418-609
PSR J1418-6058
Source Type:PWN
R.A.:14 18 04 (hh mm ss)
Dec.:-60 58 31 (dd mm ss)
Gal Long: 313.25 (deg)
Gal Lat: 0.15 (deg)
Distance: 5.6 kpc
Flux:0.06 (Crab Units)
Energy Threshold:300 GeV
Spectral Index:2.26
Extended:Yes
Size (X):0.08 (deg)
Size (Y):0.06 (deg)
Discovery Date:2006-09
Discovered By: H.E.S.S.
TeVCat SubCat:Default Catalog

Source Notes:


H.E.S.S. Galactic Plane Survey (HGPS, 2018):
A selection of information for each of the 78 sources in the HGPS is provided in TeVCat. For full details, visit the HGPS website.
Name: HESS J1418-609
Source Class: PWN
Identified Object: PSR J1418-6058
R.A. (J2000): 214.50 deg (14 18 00)
Dec. (J2000): -60.99 deg (-60 59 09)
Positional uncertainty: 0.026 deg
Spatial Model: Gaussian
Size: 0.108 +/- 0.011 deg
Spectral Model: power law
Integral Flux > 1 TeV: 2.69e-12 +/- 1.53e-13 cm-2 s-1
Pivot Energy, E0: 1.87 TeV
Diff. Flux at E0: 8.27e-13 +/- 4.64e-14 cm-2 s-1 TeV-1
Spectral Index: 2.26 +/- 0.05
HGPS Source Notes:
This is one of the 31 firmly-identified objects among the HGPS sources. Three possible associations are listed in Table A.9. "This is a list of astronomical objects, extracted from catalogs of plausible counterparts, which are are found to be spatially coincident with the HGPS source":
- 3FGL J1418.6−6058 (3FGL)
- G313.3+0.1 (PWN)
- J1418−6058 (PSR)


Source position and its uncertainty:

From Aharonian et al. (2006):
- RA (J2000): 14h 18m 04s +/- 7s
- Dec (J2000): -60d 58m 31s +/- 35"

Source Extent:

From Aharonian et al. (2006):
- semi-major axis: 4.9' +/- 1.5' (= 0.082 +/- 0.025 deg)
- semi-major axis: 2.7' +/- 0.7' (= 0.045 +/- 0.012 deg)
- angle: 46.2 +/- 20.4 deg
... major axis, North to East

Source Association:

From Jaegeun et al. (2023):
- "The extended hard X-ray and TeV emission, associated respectively
with synchrotron radiation and inverse Compton scattering by
relativistic electrons, suggests that particles are accelerated to
very high energies (>=500 TeV), indicating that the Rabbit PWN is a
Galactic PeVatron candidate."

From Acero et al. (2013):
- This LAT emission from this source below 10 GeV is likely from a
pulsar


Seen by: H.E.S.S.
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