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  4. Challenges in reconciling observations and theory of the brightest high-energy flare ever of 3C 279
 
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Challenges in reconciling observations and theory of the brightest high-energy flare ever of 3C 279

Author(s)
Bottacini
Bttcher, Markus
Pian, Elena
Gasparrini, Dario  
Subjects

Astrophysics - High E...

Date Issued
2018-07-01
Mission(s)
Other
Abstract
Recent high-energy missions have allowed keeping watch over blazars in flaring states, which provide deep insights into the engine powered by supermassive black holes. However, having a quasar caught in a very bright flaring state is not easy requiring long surveys. Therefore, the observation of such flaring events represents a goldmine for theoretical studies. Such a flaring event was captured by the INTEGRAL mission in June 2015 while performing its (as of today) deepest extragalactic survey when it caught the prominent blazar 3C~279 in its brightest flare ever recorded at gamma-ray energies. The flare was simultaneously recorded by the Fermi gamma-ray mission, by the Swift mission, by the INTEGRAL mission and by observations ranging from UV, through optical to the near-IR bands. The derived snapshot of this broad spectral energy distribution of the flare has been modeled in the context of a one-zone radiation transfer leptonic and lepto-hadronic models constraining the single emission components. The derived parameters of both models challenge the physical conditions in the jet. However, very recently published very-high-energy (VHE) data at TeV energies are very close to our lepto-hadronic model.
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.13025/5636
URL
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2018arXiv180704046B
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