96 research outputs found
Olber's Paradox for Superluminal Neutrinos: Constraining Extreme Neutrino Speeds at TeV-ZeV Energies with the Diffuse Neutrino Background
The only invariant speed in special relativity is c; therefore, if some
neutrinos travel at even tiny speeds above c, normal special relativity is
incomplete and any superluminal speed may be possible. I derive a limit on
superluminal neutrino speeds v >> c at high energies by noting that such speeds
would increase the size of the neutrino horizon. The increased volume of the
Universe visible leads to a brighter astrophysical neutrino background. The
nondetection of "guaranteed" neutrino backgrounds from star-forming galaxies
and ultrahigh energy cosmic rays (UHECRs) constrains v/c at TeV--ZeV energies.
I find that v/c <= 820 at 60 TeV from the nondetection of neutrinos from
star-forming galaxies. The nondetection of neutrinos from UHECRs constrains v/c
to be less than 2500 at 0.1 EeV in a pessimistic model and less than 4.6 at 4
EeV in an optimistic model. The UHECR neutrino background nondetection is
strongly inconsistent with a naive quadratic extrapolation of the OPERA results
to EeV energies. The limits apply subject to some caveats, particularly that
the expected pionic neutrino backgrounds exist and that neutrinos travel faster
than c when they pass the detector. They could be improved substantially as the
expected neutrino backgrounds are better understood and with new experimental
neutrino background limits. I also point out that extremely subluminal speeds
would result in a much smaller neutrino background intensity than expected.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, fixed titl
Binaries with the eyes of CTA
The binary systems that have been detected in gamma rays have proven very useful to study high-energy processes, in particular particle acceleration, emission and radiation reprocessing, and the dynamics of the underlying magnetized flows. Binary systems, either detected or potential gamma-ray emitters, can be grouped in different subclasses depending on the nature of the binary components or the origin of the particle acceleration: the interaction of the winds of either a pulsar and a massive star or two massive stars; accretion onto a compact object and jet formation; and interaction of a relativistic outflow with the external medium. We evaluate the potentialities of an instrument like the Cherenkov telescope array (CTA) to study the non-thermal physics of gamma-ray binaries, which requires the observation of high-energy phenomena at different time and spatial scales. We analyze the capability of CTA, under different configurations, to probe the spectral, temporal and spatial behavior of gamma-ray binaries in the context of the known or expected physics of these sources. CTA will be able to probe with high spectral, temporal and spatial resolution the physical processes behind the gamma-ray emission in binaries, significantly increasing as well the number of known sources. This will allow the derivation of information on the particle acceleration and emission sites qualitatively better than what is currently available
Observation of Pulsed Gamma-rays Above 25 GeV from the Crab Pulsar with MAGIC
One fundamental question about pulsars concerns the mechanism of their pulsed
electromagnetic emission. Measuring the high-end region of a pulsar's spectrum
would shed light on this question. By developing a new electronic trigger, we
lowered the threshold of the Major Atmospheric gamma-ray Imaging Cherenkov
(MAGIC) telescope to 25 GeV. In this configuration, we detected pulsed
gamma-rays from the Crab pulsar that were greater than 25 GeV, revealing a
relatively high cutoff energy in the phase-averaged spectrum. This indicates
that the emission occurs far out in the magnetosphere, hence excluding the
polar-cap scenario as a possible explanation of our measurement. The high
cutoff energy also challenges the slot-gap scenario.Comment: Slight modification of the analysis: Fitting a more general function
to the combined data set of COMPTEL, EGRET and MAGIC. Final result and
conclusion is unchange
First bounds on the high-energy emission from isolated Wolf-Rayet binary systems
High-energy gamma-ray emission is theoretically expected to arise in tight
binary star systems (with high mass loss and high velocity winds), although the
evidence of this relationship has proven to be elusive so far. Here we present
the first bounds on this putative emission from isolated Wolf-Rayet (WR) star
binaries, WR 147 and WR 146, obtained from observations with the MAGIC
telescope.Comment: (Authors are the MAGIC Collaboration.) Manuscript in press at The
Astrophysical Journal Letter
MAGIC Upper Limits for two Milagro-detected, Bright Fermi Sources in the Region of SNR G65.1+0.6
We report on the observation of the region around supernova remnant G65.1+0.6
with the stand-alone MAGIC-I telescope. This region hosts the two bright GeV
gamma-ray sources 1FGL J1954.3+2836 and 1FGL J1958.6+2845. They are identified
as GeV pulsars and both have a possible counterpart detected at about 35 TeV by
the Milagro observatory. MAGIC collected 25.5 hours of good quality data, and
found no significant emission in the range around 1 TeV. We therefore report
differential flux upper limits, assuming the emission to be point-like (<0.1
deg) or within a radius of 0.3 deg. In the point-like scenario, the flux limits
around 1 TeV are at the level of 3 % and 2 % of the Crab Nebula flux, for the
two sources respectively. This implies that the Milagro emission is either
extended over a much larger area than our point spread function, or it must be
peaked at energies beyond 1 TeV, resulting in a photon index harder than 2.2 in
the TeV band.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
Probing quantum gravity using photons from a flare of the active galactic nucleus Markarian 501 observed by the MAGIC telescope
We analyze the timing of photons observed by the MAGIC telescope during a
flare of the active galactic nucleus Mkn 501 for a possible correlation with
energy, as suggested by some models of quantum gravity (QG), which predict a
vacuum refractive index \simeq 1 + (E/M_{QGn})^n, n = 1,2. Parametrizing the
delay between gamma-rays of different energies as \Delta t =\pm\tau_l E or
\Delta t =\pm\tau_q E^2, we find \tau_l=(0.030\pm0.012) s/GeV at the 2.5-sigma
level, and \tau_q=(3.71\pm2.57)x10^{-6} s/GeV^2, respectively. We use these
results to establish lower limits M_{QG1} > 0.21x10^{18} GeV and M_{QG2} >
0.26x10^{11} GeV at the 95% C.L. Monte Carlo studies confirm the MAGIC
sensitivity to propagation effects at these levels. Thermal plasma effects in
the source are negligible, but we cannot exclude the importance of some other
source effect.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, Phys. Lett. B, reflects published versio
Simultaneous multi-frequency observation of the unknown redshift blazar PG 1553+113 in March-April 2008
The blazar PG 1553+113 is a well known TeV gamma-ray emitter. In this paper,
we determine its spectral energy distribution using simultaneous
multi-frequency data in order to study its emission processes. An extensive
campaign was carried out between March and April 2008, where optical, X-ray,
high-energy (HE) gamma-ray, and very-high-energy (VHE) gamma-ray data were
obtained with the KVA, Abastumani, REM, RossiXTE/ASM, AGILE and MAGIC
telescopes, respectively. This is the first simultaneous broad-band (i.e.,
HE+VHE) gamma-ray observation, though AGILE did not detect the source. We
combine data to derive source's spectral energy distribution and interpret its
double peaked shape within the framework of a synchrotron self compton modelComment: 5 pages, 2 figures, publishe
A search for Very High Energy gamma-ray emission from Scorpius X-1 with the MAGIC telescopes
The acceleration of particles up to GeV or higher energies in microquasars
has been the subject of considerable theoretical and observational efforts in
the past few years. Sco X-1 is a microquasar from which evidence of highly
energetic particles in the jet has been found when it is in the so-called
Horizontal Branch (HB), a state when the radio and hard X-ray fluxes are higher
and a powerful relativistic jet is present. Here we present the first very high
energy gamma-ray observations of Sco X-1 obtained with the MAGIC telescopes. An
analysis of the whole dataset does not yield a significant signal, with 95% CL
flux upper limits above 300 GeV at the level of 2.4x10^{-12} ph/cm^2/s.
Simultaneous RXTE observations were conducted to search for TeV emission during
particular X-ray states of the source. A selection of the gamma-ray data
obtained during the HB based on the X-ray colors did not yield a signal either,
with an upper limit of 3.4x10^{-12} ph/cm^2/s. These upper limits place a
constraint on the maximum TeV luminosity to non-thermal X-ray luminosity of
L_{VHE}/L_{ntX}<0.02, that can be related to a maximum TeV luminosity to jet
power ratio of L_{VHE}/L_{j}<10^{-3}. Our upper limits indicate that the
underlying high-energy emission physics in Sco X-1 must be inherently different
from that of the hitherto detected gamma-ray binaries.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, 2 tables. Version as published in ApJ
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