Fermi Large Area Telescope and multi-wavelength observations of the flaring activity of PKS 1510-089 between 2008 September and 2009 June
Fermi-LAT Collaboration

TL;DR
This study presents multi-wavelength observations of PKS 1510-089 during a high activity period, revealing complex variability, spectral features, and correlations across bands, and models the emission within a leptonic jet scenario.
Contribution
It provides detailed multi-wavelength data and analysis of PKS 1510-089's flaring activity, including spectral modeling and insights into jet and accretion disk energetics.
Findings
Gamma-ray luminosity reached ~2x10^48 erg/s during peak.
Gamma-ray flux leads optical flux by about 13 days.
Broadband spectrum consistent with leptonic jet models.
Abstract
We report on the multi-wavelength observations of PKS 1510-089 (a flat spectrum radio quasar at z=0.361) during its high activity period between 2008 September and 2009 June. During this 11 months period, the source was characterized by a complex variability at optical, UV and gamma-ray bands, on time scales down to 6-12 hours. The brightest gamma-ray isotropic luminosity, recorded on 2009 March 26, was ~ 2x10^48erg s^-1. The spectrum in the Fermi-LAT energy range shows a mild curvature well described by a log-parabolic law, and can be understood as due to the Klein-Nishina effect. The gamma-ray flux has a complex correlation with the other wavelengths. There is no correlation at all with the X-ray band, a weak correlation with the UV, and a significant correlation with the optical flux. The gamma-ray flux seems to lead the optical one by about 13 days. From the UV photometry we…
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