Multiwavelength observations of 3C 454.3. I. The AGILE 2007 November campaign on the "Crazy Diamond"
S. Vercellone, A.W. Chen, V. Vittorini, A. Giuliani, F. D'Ammando, M., Tavani, I. Donnarumma, G. Pucella, C.M. Raiteri, M. Villata, W.P. Chen, G., Tosti, D. Impiombato, P. Romano, A. Belfiore, A. De Luca, G. Novara, F., Senziani, A. Bazzano, M.T. Fiocchi, P. Ubertini, A. Ferrari

TL;DR
This paper reports on a comprehensive multiwavelength observational campaign of blazar 3C 454.3 in November 2007, revealing significant gamma-ray variability and supporting inverse Compton scattering as the main emission mechanism.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed simultaneous multi-instrument observations of 3C 454.3 across gamma-ray, X-ray, and optical bands, demonstrating correlated variability and constraining emission models.
Findings
Detected gamma-ray flux with high significance and variability.
Measured X-ray and optical fluxes showing strong variability.
Supported inverse Compton scattering as the dominant emission process.
Abstract
[Abridged] We report on a multiwavelength observation of the blazar 3C 454.3 (which we dubbed "crazy diamond") carried out on November 2007 by means of the astrophysical satellites AGILE, INTEGRAL, Swift, the WEBT Consortium, and the optical-NIR telescope REM. 3C 454.3 is detected at a level during the 3-week observing period, with an average flux above 100 MeV of \phcmsec. The gamma-ray spectrum can be fit with a single power-law with photon index between 100 MeV and 1 GeV. We detect significant day-by-day variability of the gamma-ray emission during our observations, and we can exclude that the fluxes are constant at the 99.6% () level. The source was detected typically around 40 degrees off-axis, and it was substantially off--axis in the field of view of the AGILE…
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