Multi-wavelength Observations of H 2356-309
HESS Collaboration: A. Abramowski, F. Acero, F. Aharonian, A.G., Akhperjanian, G. Anton, U. Barres de Almeida, A.R. Bazer-Bachi, Y. Becherini,, B. Behera, W. Benbow, K. Bernloehr, A. Bochow, C. Boisson, J. Bolmont, V., Borrel, J. Brucker, F. Brun, P. Brun, R. Buehler, T. Bulik

TL;DR
This study presents multi-wavelength observations of the blazar H 2356-309, detecting VHE gamma-ray emission, analyzing its spectral and temporal properties, and modeling its broad-band emission with a one-zone SSC model.
Contribution
First detailed multi-wavelength campaign on H 2356-309 combining VHE, X-ray, optical, and radio data with spectral modeling.
Findings
Detected strong VHE gamma-ray emission with ~13 sigma significance.
Measured a power-law VHE spectrum with photon index ~3.06.
Observed low X-ray state with a hard, broken-power-law spectrum.
Abstract
AIMS: The properties of the broad-band emission from the high-frequency peaked BL Lac H 2356-309 (z=0.165) are investigated. METHODS: Very High Energy (VHE; E > 100 GeV) observations of H 2356-309 were performed with the High Energy Stereoscopic System (HESS) from 2004 through 2007. Simultaneous optical/UV and X-ray observations were made with the XMM-Newton satellite on June 12/13 and June 14/15, 2005. NRT radio observations were also contemporaneously performed in 2005. ATOM optical monitoring observations were also made in 2007. RESULTS: A strong VHE signal, ~13 sigma total, was detected by HESS after the four years HESS observations (116.8 hrs live time). The integral flux above 240 GeV is I(>240 GeV) = (3.06 +- 0.26 {stat} +- 0.61 {syst}) x 10^{-12} cm^{-2} s^{-1}, corresponding to ~1.6% of the flux observed from the Crab Nebula. A time-averaged energy spectrum is measured from 200…
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.
