Abstract
During the first six months of data taking the Fermi satellite was capable to detect gamma ray emission of the nearby supernova remnant IC443 (G189.1+3.0). IC443 is a shell-type supernova remnant located in the anticenter region where observation can be made clean enough from possible foreground and background overlap, even though care has to be taken due to the vicinity of one of the brightest gamma-ray pulsars, Geminga. IC443 estimated age (20–30 kyr) and the observed two-shell morphology with different radii suggest that the SNR shell has been interacting with surrounding interstellar matter and a neighboring SNR shell. Also the detection of strong molecular emission lines and TeV gamma-ray emission support the idea that the blast has been interacting with dense molecular gas accelerating cosmic-ray particle. After the first year of data taking, Fermi will be surely capable to determine the spatial extension and resolve in much finer details the spectral shape of the gamma-ray emission produced by the accelerated cosmic rays in IC443 distinguished from those of galactic origin.
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