Very High Energy Gamma-ray Radiation from the Stellar-mass Black Hole Cygnus X-1
MAGIC Collaboration: J. Albert, et al

TL;DR
This study reports the first evidence of very high energy gamma-ray emission from the stellar-mass black hole Cygnus X-1, observed with the MAGIC telescope during an X-ray flare, with a well-characterized energy spectrum.
Contribution
It provides the first experimental detection of VHE gamma-ray emission from a stellar-mass black hole, linking gamma-ray activity to X-ray flares in Cygnus X-1.
Findings
Detected gamma-ray excess coinciding with X-ray flare
Measured a power-law energy spectrum with index -3.2
Established upper limits on steady gamma-ray flux
Abstract
We report on the results from the observations in very high energy band (VHE, E_gamma > 100 GeV) of the black hole X-ray binary (BHXB) Cygnus X-1. The observations were performed with the MAGIC telescope, for a total of 40 hours during 26 nights, spanning the period between June and November 2006. Searches for steady gamma-ray signals yielded no positive result and upper limits to the integral flux ranging between 1 and 2% of the Crab nebula flux, depending on the energy, have been established. We also analyzed each observation night independently, obtaining evidence of gamma-ray signals at the 4.0 standard deviations (sigma) significance level (3.2 sigma after trial correction) for 154 minutes effective on-time (EOT) on September 24 between 20h58 and 23h41 UTC, coinciding with an X-ray flare seen by RXTE, Swift and INTEGRAL. A search for faster-varying signals within a night resulted…
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