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

TL;DR
This paper reports the detection of the highest gamma-ray flux from the blazar S5 0716+714 during September-October 2007, analyzing simultaneous optical and gamma-ray data to understand its variable emission and spectral energy distribution.
Contribution
First detection of the highest gamma-ray flux from S5 0716+714 with detailed multiwavelength analysis and modeling of its spectral energy distribution during active states.
Findings
Gamma-ray flux increased by at least four times in three days.
Detected gamma-ray emission at a significance level of 9.6-sigma.
SED consistent with a two-component SSC model.
Abstract
We report the gamma-ray activity from the intermediate BL Lac S5 0716+714 during observations acquired by the AGILE satellite in September and October 2007. These detections of activity were contemporaneous with a period of intense optical activity, which was monitored by GASP-WEBT. This simultaneous optical and gamma-ray coverage allows us to study in detail the light curves, time lags, gamma-ray photon spectrum, and Spectral Energy Distributions (SEDs) during different states of activity. AGILE observed the source with its two co-aligned imagers, the Gamma-Ray Imaging Detector (GRID) and the hard X-ray imager (Super-AGILE), which are sensitive to the 30 MeV-50 GeV and 18-60 keV energy ranges, respectively. Observations were completed in two different periods, the first between 2007 September 4-23, and the second between 2007 October 24-November 1. Over the period 2007 September 7-12,…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
