AGILE detection of a rapid gamma-ray flare from the blazar PKS 1510-089 during the GASP-WEBT monitoring
F. D'Ammando, G. Pucella, C. M. Raiteri, M. Villata, V. Vittorini, S., Vercellone, I. Donnarumma, F. Longo, M. Tavani, A. Argan, G. Barbiellini, F., Boffelli, A. Bulgarelli, P. Caraveo, P. W. Cattaneo, A. W. Chen, V. Cocco, E., Costa, E. Del Monte, G. De Paris, G. Di Cocco

TL;DR
This paper reports the detection of a rapid gamma-ray flare from the blazar PKS 1510-089 by the AGILE satellite, correlating gamma-ray activity with optical and X-ray variability, and modeling the spectral energy distribution with a one-zone synchrotron self-Compton approach.
Contribution
First detection of a rapid gamma-ray flare from PKS 1510-089 with AGILE, combined with multiwavelength observations and spectral modeling.
Findings
Gamma-ray flux increased significantly during the flare.
Optical and millimetric fluxes also showed flaring activity.
X-ray spectrum exhibited a harder-when-brighter behavior.
Abstract
We report the detection by the AGILE satellite of a rapid gamma-ray flare from the powerful gamma-ray quasar PKS 1510-089, during a pointing centered on the Galactic Center region from 1 March to 30 March 2008. This source has been continuosly monitored in the radio-to-optical bands by the GLAST-AGILE Support Program (GASP) of the Whole Earth Blazar Telescope (WEBT). Moreover, the gamma-ray flaring episode triggered three ToO observations by the Swift satellite in three consecutive days, starting from 20 March 2008. In the period 1-16 March 2008, AGILE detected gamma-ray emission from PKS 1510-089 at a significance level of 6.2-sigma with an average flux over the entire period of (84 +/- 17) x 10^{-8} photons cm^{-2} s^{-1} for photon energies above 100 MeV. After a predefined satellite re-pointing, between 17 and 21 March 2008, AGILE detected the source at a significance level of…
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