If you looked in the status column in the area above the portion of the Disk Management window you cropped, you likely would see them identified as a recovery partition and EFI System partition. Regarding the EFI System Partition, the EFI System Partition Wikipedia article notes:
The EFI System partition (ESP) is a partition on a data storage device
that is used by computers adhering to the Unified Extensible Firmware
Interface (UEFI). When a computer is powered up and booted, UEFI
firmware loads files stored on the ESP to start installed operating
systems and various utilities. ... ESP contains the boot loader
programs for all installed operating systems (which are contained in
other partitions on the same or other storage device), device driver
files for devices present in a computer that are used by the firmware
at boot time, system utility programs that are intended to be run
before an operating system is booted, and data files such as error
logs. ... Microsoft recommends that when partitioning a disk, the EFI
System partition be the first partition on the disk. This is not a
requirement of the EFI specification itself.
Also, if you perform a system image backup of a Windows 8 system, you would likely see the two partitions identified as "EFI System Partition" and "Recovery".