@article{b4708f04e4a1410bad3dfb07b0642038,
title = "Very High-energy Gamma-ray Emission from LS I +61° 303 Binary",
abstract = "LS I +61° 303 is one of around ten gamma-ray binaries detected so far which has a spectral energy distribution dominated by MeV-GeV photons. It is located at a distance of 2 kpc and consists of a compact object (black hole or neutron star) in an eccentric orbit around a 10-15 M Be star, with an orbital period of 26.496 days. The binary orbit modulates the emission ranging from radio to TeV energies. A second, longer, modulation period of 1667 days (the super-orbital period) has also been detected from radio to TeV observations. The VERITAS imaging atmospheric Cherenkov telescope array has been observing LS I +61° 303 since 2006, and has accumulated a dataset that fully covers the entire orbit. Increased coverage of the source in the very-high-energy band is currently underway to provide more results on the modulation pattern, super-orbital period, and orbit-to-orbit variability at the highest energies. The spectral measurements at the highest energies will reveal more information about gamma-ray production/absorption mechanisms, the nature of the compact object, and the particle acceleration mechanism. Using >150 hrs of VERITAS data, we present a detailed study of the spectral energy distribution and periodic behavior of this rare gamma-ray source type at very-high energy.",
author = "{VERITAS collaboration} and Adams, {C. B.} and A. Archer and W. Benbow and A. Brill and Buckley, {J. H.} and M. Capasso and Christiansen, {J. L.} and Chromey, {A. J.} and M. Errando and A. Falcone and Farrell, {K. A.} and Q. Feng and Foote, {G. M.} and L. Fortson and A. Furniss and A. Gent and Gillanders, {G. H.} and C. Giuri and O. Gueta and D. Hanna and O. Hervet and J. Holder and B. Hona and Humensky, {T. B.} and W. Jin and P. Kaaret and M. Kertzman and David Kieda and Kleiner, {T. K.} and S. Kumar and Lang, {M. J.} and M. Lundy and G. Maier and McGrath, {C. E.} and P. Moriarty and R. Mukherjee and D. Nieto and M. Nievas-Rosillo and S. O'Brien and Ong, {R. A.} and Otte, {A. N.} and Patel, {S. R.} and S. Patel and K. Pfrang and M. Pohl and Prado, {R. R.} and E. Pueschel and J. Quinn and K. Ragan and Reynolds, {P. T.}",
note = "Funding Information: This research is supported by grants from the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science, the U.S. National Science Foundation and the Smithsonian Institution, by NSERC in Canada, and by the Helmholtz Association in Germany. This research used resources provided by the Open Science Grid, which is supported by the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Department of Energy{\textquoteright}s Office of Science, and resources of the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC), a U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science User Facility operated under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231. We acknowledge the excellent work of the technical support staff at the Fred Lawrence Whipple Observatory and at the collaborating institutions in the construction and operation of the instrument. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} Copyright owned by the author(s) under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0); 37th International Cosmic Ray Conference, ICRC 2021 ; Conference date: 12-07-2021 Through 23-07-2021",
year = "2022",
month = mar,
day = "18",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "395",
journal = "Proceedings of Science",
issn = "1824-8039",
publisher = "Sissa Medialab Srl",
}