AGILE detection of variable gamma-ray activity from the blazar S5 0716+714 during September-October 2007
F. D'Ammando, A. W. Chen, M. Villata, C. M. Raiteri, V. Vittorini, A., Bulgarelli, I. Donnarumma, A. Giuliani, F. Longo, L. Pacciani, G. Pucella, M., Tavani, S. Vercellone

TL;DR
This paper reports the detection of intense gamma-ray activity from blazar S5 0716+714 in 2007, revealing unprecedented flux levels and rapid variability, and discusses the implications for emission models.
Contribution
First detection of the highest gamma-ray flux from S5 0716+714, demonstrating rapid variability and supporting a multi-component SSC emission model.
Findings
Gamma-ray flux was the highest ever detected for this blazar.
Gamma-ray emission showed variability on daily timescales.
Spectral energy distribution fits a two-component SSC model.
Abstract
We report the gamma-ray activity from the Intermediate BL Lac S5 0716+714 during 2007 September-October observations by the AGILE satellite, coincident with a period of intense optical activity of the source monitored by GASP-WEBT. AGILE observed the source with its two co-aligned imagers, the Gamma-Ray Imaging Detector (GRID) and the hard X-ray imager (Super-AGILE) sensitive in the energy range 30 MeV-50 GeV and 18-60 keV respectively, in two different periods: the first between 4 and 23 September 2007, the second between 24 October and 1 November 2007. Over the period 7-12 September, AGILE detected gamma-ray emission from the source at a significance level of 9.6-sigma with an average flux (E>100 MeV) of (97+/-15) x 10^{-8} photons cm^{-2} s^{-1}, increasing by a factor of at least four within three days. No emission was detected by Super-AGILE in the energy range 18-60 keV, with a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Neutrino Physics Research · Particle Accelerators and Free-Electron Lasers
