104 research outputs found
Phase-resolved Crab pulsar measurements from 25 to 400 GeV with the MAGIC telescopes
We report on observations of the Crab pulsar with the MAGIC telescopes. Our
data were taken in both monoscopic (> 25GeV) and stereoscopic (> 50GeV)
observation modes. Two peaks were detected with both modes and phase-resolved
energy spectra were calculated. By comparing with Fermi- LAT measurements, we
find that the energy spectrum of the Crab pulsar does not follow a power law
with an exponential cutoff, but has an additional hard component, extending up
to at least 400 GeV. This suggests that the emission above 25 GeV is not
dominated by curvature radiation, as suggested in the standard scenarios of the
OG and SG models.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, Proc. TAUP 2011, submitted for publication in
JCP
A lower bound on intergalactic magnetic fields from time variability of 1ES 0229+200 from MAGIC and Fermi/LAT observations
Extended and delayed emission around distant TeV sources induced by the
effects of propagation of gamma rays through the intergalactic medium can be
used for the measurement of the intergalactic magnetic field (IGMF). We search
for delayed GeV emission from the hard-spectrum TeV blazar 1ES 0229+200 with
the goal to detect or constrain the IGMF-dependent secondary flux generated
during the propagation of TeV gamma rays through the intergalactic medium. We
analyze the most recent MAGIC observations over a 5 year time span and
complement them with historic data of the H.E.S.S. and VERITAS telescopes along
with a 12-year long exposure of the Fermi/LAT telescope. We use them to trace
source evolution in the GeV-TeV band over one-and-a-half decade in time. We use
Monte Carlo simulations to predict the delayed secondary gamma-ray flux,
modulated by the source variability, as revealed by TeV-band observations. We
then compare these predictions for various assumed IGMF strengths to all
available measurements of the gamma-ray flux evolution. We find that the source
flux in the energy range above 200 GeV experiences variations around its
average on the 14 years time span of observations. No evidence for the flux
variability is found in 1-100 GeV energy range accessible to Fermi/LAT.
Non-detection of variability due to delayed emission from electromagnetic
cascade developing in the intergalactic medium imposes a lower bound of
B>1.8e-17 G for long correlation length IGMF and B>1e-14 G for an IGMF of the
cosmological origin. Though weaker than the one previously derived from the
analysis of Fermi/LAT data, this bound is more robust, being based on a
conservative intrinsic source spectrum estimate and accounting for the details
of source variability in the TeV energy band. We discuss implications of this
bound for cosmological magnetic fields which might explain the baryon asymmetry
of the Universe.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, accepted to A&A. Corresponding authors: Ievgen
Vovk, Paolo Da Vela (mailto:[email protected]) and Andrii Neronov
(mailto:[email protected]
Statistics of VHE \u3b3-rays in temporal association with radio giant pulses from the Crab pulsar
Aims. The aim of this study is to search for evidence of a common emission engine between radio giant pulses (GPs) and very-high-energy (VHE, E& x2004;> & x2004;100 GeV) gamma-rays from the Crab pulsar. Methods. We performed 16 h of simultaneous observations of the Crab pulsar at 1.4 GHz with the Effelsberg radio telescope and the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope (WSRT), and at energies above 60 GeV we used the Major Atmospheric Gamma-ray Imaging Cherenkov (MAGIC) telescopes. We searched for a statistical correlation between the radio and VHE gamma-ray emission with search windows of different lengths and different time lags to the arrival times of a radio GP. A dedicated search for an enhancement in the number of VHE gamma-rays correlated with the occurrence of radio GPs was carried out separately for the P1 and P2 phase ranges, respectively. Results. In the radio data sample, 99444 radio GPs were detected. We find no significant correlation between the GPs and VHE photons in any of the search windows. Depending on phase cuts and the chosen search windows, we find upper limits at a 95% confidence level on an increase in VHE gamma-ray events correlated with radio GPs between 7% and 61% of the average Crab pulsar VHE flux for the P1 and P2 phase ranges, respectively. This puts upper limits on the flux increase during a radio GP between 12% and 2900% of the pulsed VHE flux, depending on the search window duration and phase cuts. This is the most stringent upper limit on a correlation between gamma-ray emission and radio GPs reported so far
The extreme HBL behaviour of Markarian 501 during 2012
A multiwavelength campaign was organized to take place between March and July of 2012. Excellent temporal coverage was obtained with more than 25 instruments, including the MAGIC, FACT and VERITAS Cherenkov telescopes, the instruments on board the Swift and Fermi spacecraft, and the telescopes operated by the GASP-WEBT collaboration. Mrk 501 showed a very high energy (VHE) gamma-ray flux above 0.2 TeV of 0.5 times the Crab Nebula flux (CU) for most of the campaign. The highest activity occurred on 2012 June 9, when the VHE flux was 3 CU, and the peak of the high-energy spectral component was found to be at 2 TeV. This study reports very hard X-ray spectra, and the hardest VHE spectra measured to date for Mrk 501. The fractional variability was found to increase with energy, with the highest variability occurring at VHE, and a significant correlation between the X-ray and VHE bands. The unprecedentedly hard X-ray and VHE spectra measured imply that their low- and high-energy components peaked above 5 keV and 0.5 TeV, respectively, during a large fraction of the observing campaign, and hence that Mrk 501 behaved like an extreme high-frequency- peaked blazar (EHBL) throughout the 2012 observing season. This suggests that being an EHBL may not be a permanent characteristic of a blazar, but rather a state which may change over time. The one-zone synchrotron self-Compton (SSC) scenario can successfully describe the segments of the SED where most energy is emitted, with a significant correlation between the electron energy density and the VHE gamma-ray activity, suggesting that most of the variability may be explained by the injection of high-energy electrons. The one-zone SSC scenario used reproduces the behaviour seen between the measured X-ray and VHE gamma-ray fluxes, and predicts that the correlation becomes stronger with increasing energy of the X-rays
The Blazar TXS 0506+056 Associated with a High-energy Neutrino: Insights into Extragalactic Jets and Cosmic-Ray Acceleration
A neutrino with energy ∼290 TeV, IceCube-170922A, was detected in coincidence with the BL Lac object TXS 0506+056 during enhanced gamma-ray activity, with chance coincidence being rejected at ∼3σ level. We monitored the object in the very-high-energy (VHE) band with the Major Atmospheric Gamma-ray Imaging Cherenkov (MAGIC) telescopes for ∼41 hr from 1.3 to 40.4 days after the neutrino detection. Day-timescale variability is clearly resolved. We interpret the quasi-simultaneous neutrino and broadband electromagnetic observations with a novel one-zone lepto-hadronic model, based on interactions of electrons and protons co-accelerated in the jet with external photons originating from a slow-moving plasma sheath surrounding the faster jet spine. We can reproduce the multiwavelength spectra of TXS 0506+056 with neutrino rate and energy compatible with IceCube-170922A, and with plausible values for the jet power of
. The steep spectrum observed by MAGIC is concordant with internal γγ absorption above ∼100 GeV entailed by photohadronic production of a ∼290 TeV neutrino, corroborating a genuine connection between the multi-messenger signals. In contrast to previous predictions of predominantly hadronic emission from neutrino sources, the gamma-rays can be mostly ascribed to inverse Compton upscattering of external photons by accelerated electrons. The X-ray and VHE bands provide crucial constraints on the emission from both accelerated electrons and protons. We infer that the maximum energy of protons in the jet comoving frame can be in the range ∼1014 – 1018 eV.Peer Reviewe
First detection of VHE gamma-ray emission from TXS 1515-273, study of its X-ray variability and spectral energy distribution
We report here on the first multi-wavelength (MWL) campaign on the blazar TXS
1515-273, undertaken in 2019 and extending from radio to very-high-energy gamma
rays (VHE). Up until now, this blazar had not been the subject of any detailed
MWL observations. It has a rather hard photon index at GeV energies and was
considered a candidate extreme high-synchrotronpeaked source. MAGIC
observations resulted in the first-time detection of the source in VHE with a
statistical significance of 7.6. The average integral VHE flux of the
source is 6 1% of the Crab nebula flux above 400 GeV. X-ray coverage was
provided by Swift-XRT, XMMNewton, and NuSTAR. The long continuous X-ray
observations were separated by 9 h, both showing clear hour scale
flares. In the XMM-Newton data, both the rise and decay timescales are longer
in the soft X-ray than in the hard X-ray band, indicating the presence of a
particle cooling regime. The X-ray variability timescales were used to
constrain the size of the emission region and the strength of the magnetic
field. The data allowed us to determine the synchrotron peak frequency and
classify the source as a flaring high, but not extreme, synchrotron peaked
object. Considering the constraints and variability patterns from the X-ray
data, we model the broad-band spectral energy distribution. We applied a simple
one-zone model, which could not reproduce the radio emission and the shape of
the optical emission, and a two-component leptonic model with two interacting
components, enabling us to reproduce the emission from radio to VHE band
Investigating the blazar TXS 0506+056 through sharp multi-wavelength eyes during 2017-2019
The blazar TXS 0506+056 got into the spotlight of the astrophysical community
in September 2017, when a high-energy neutrino detected by IceCube
(IceCube-170922A) was associated at the 3 level to a -ray
flare from this source. This multi-messenger photon-neutrino association
remains, as per today, the most significant one ever observed. TXS 0506+056 was
a poorly studied object before the IceCube-170922A event. To better
characterize its broad-band emission, we organized a multi-wavelength campaign
lasting 16 months (November 2017 to February 2019), covering the radio-band
(Mets\"ahovi, OVRO), the optical/UV (ASAS-SN, KVA, REM, Swift/UVOT), the X-rays
(Swift/XRT, NuSTAR), the high-energy rays (Fermi/LAT) and the
very-high-energy (VHE) rays (MAGIC). In rays, the behaviour
of the source was significantly different from the 2017 one: MAGIC observations
show the presence of flaring activity during December 2018, while the source
only shows an excess at the 4 level during the rest of the campaign (74
hours of accumulated exposure); Fermi/LAT observations show several short
(days-to-week timescale) flares, different from the long-term brightening of
2017. No significant flares are detected at lower energies. The radio light
curve shows an increasing flux trend, not seen in other wavelengths. We model
the multi-wavelength spectral energy distributions in a lepto-hadronic
scenario, in which the hadronic emission emerges as Bethe-Heitler and
pion-decay cascade in the X-rays and VHE rays. According to the model
presented here, the December 2018 -ray flare was connected to a
neutrino emission that was too brief and not bright enough to be detected by
current neutrino instruments.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures; in press in Ap
Measurement of the Extragalactic Background Light using MAGIC and Fermi-LAT gamma-ray observations of blazars up to z = 1
We present a measurement of the extragalactic background light (EBL) based on
a joint likelihood analysis of 32 gamma-ray spectra for 12 blazars in the
redshift range z = 0.03 to 0.944, obtained by the MAGIC telescopes and
Fermi-LAT. The EBL is the part of the diffuse extragalactic radiation spanning
the ultraviolet, visible and infrared bands. Major contributors to the EBL are
the light emitted by stars through the history of the universe, and the
fraction of it which was absorbed by dust in galaxies and re-emitted at longer
wavelengths. The EBL can be studied indirectly through its effect on very-high
energy photons that are emitted by cosmic sources and absorbed via
photon-photon interactions during their propagation across cosmological
distances. We obtain estimates of the EBL density in good agreement with
state-of-the-art models of the EBL production and evolution. The 1-sigma upper
bounds, including systematic uncertainties, are between 13% and 23% above the
nominal EBL density in the models. No anomaly in the expected transparency of
the universe to gamma rays is observed in any range of optical depth.We also
perform a wavelength-resolved EBL determination, which results in a hint of an
excess of EBL in the 0.18 - 0.62 m range relative to the studied models,
yet compatible with them within systematics.Comment: Accepted by MNRA
Monitoring of the radio galaxy M87 during a low emission state from 2012 to 2015 with MAGIC
M87 is one of the closest (z=0.00436) extragalactic sources emitting at very-high-energies (VHE, E > 100 GeV). The aim of this work is to locate the region of the VHE gamma-ray emission and to describe the observed broadband spectral energy distribution (SED) during the low VHE gamma-ray state. The data from M87 collected between 2012 and 2015 as part of a MAGIC monitoring programme are analysed and combined with multi-wavelength data from Fermi-LAT, Chandra, HST, EVN, VLBA and the Liverpool Telescope. The averaged VHE gamma-ray spectrum can be fitted from 100GeV to 10TeV with a simple power law with a photon index of (-2.41 0.07), while the integral flux above 300GeV is . During the campaign between 2012 and 2015, M87 is generally found in a low emission state at all observed wavelengths. The VHE gamma-ray flux from the present 2012-2015 M87 campaign is consistent with a constant flux with some hint of variability () on a daily timescale in 2013. The low-state gamma-ray emission likely originates from the same region as the flare-state emission. Given the broadband SED, both a leptonic synchrotron self Compton and a hybrid photo-hadronic model reproduce the available data well, even if the latter is preferred. We note, however, that the energy stored in the magnetic field in the leptonic scenario is very low suggesting a matter dominated emission region
Periastron Observations of TeV Gamma-Ray Emission from a Binary System with a 50-year Period
We report on observations of the pulsar / Be star binary system PSR J2032+4127 / MT91 213 in the energy range between 100 GeV and 20 TeV with the VERITAS and MAGIC imaging atmospheric Cherenkov telescope arrays. The binary orbit has a period of approximately 50 years, with the most recent periastron occurring on 2017 November 13. Our observations span from 18 months prior to periastron to one month after. A new, point-like, gamma-ray source is detected, coincident with the location of PSR J2032+4127 / MT91 213. The gamma-ray light curve and spectrum are well-characterized over the periastron passage. The flux is variable over at least an order of magnitude, peaking at periastron, thus providing a firm association of the TeV source with the pulsar / Be star system. Observations prior to periastron show a cutoff in the spectrum at an energy around 0.5 TeV. This result adds a new member to the small population of known TeV binaries, and it identifies only the second source of this class in which the nature and properties of the compact object are firmly established. We compare the gamma-ray results with the light curve measured with the X-ray Telescope (XRT) on board the Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory and with the predictions of recent theoretical models of the system. We conclude that significant revision of the models is required to explain the details of the emission we have observed, and we discuss the relationship between the binary system and the overlapping steady extended source, TeV J2032+4130
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