Insights Into the High-Energy Gamma-ray Emission of Markarian 501 from Extensive Multifrequency Observations in the Fermi Era
The Fermi-LAT collaboration: A. A. Abdo et al., the MAGIC, collaboration: J. Aleksi\'c et al., the VERITAS collaboration: V. A. Acciari, et al., the GASP-WEBT consortium, multi-wavelength partners

TL;DR
This study analyzes the gamma-ray activity and spectral variability of blazar Mrk 501 over 480 days using Fermi data, complemented by a multifrequency campaign, revealing spectral changes uncorrelated with flux and supporting a one-zone synchrotron self-Compton model.
Contribution
First comprehensive multifrequency campaign on Mrk 501 during the Fermi era, combining gamma-ray, radio, and X-ray data, and modeling its emission with a detailed electron energy distribution.
Findings
Average gamma-ray spectrum fits a single power-law with index 1.78
Spectral index varies from 1.52 to 2.51, uncorrelated with flux
Emission region size estimated at <~ 0.1 pc
Abstract
We report on the gamma-ray activity of the blazar Mrk 501 during the first 480 days of Fermi operation. We find that the average LAT gamma-ray spectrum of Mrk 501 can be well described by a single power-law function with a photon index of 1.78 +/- 0.03. While we observe relatively mild flux variations with the Fermi-LAT (within less than a factor of 2), we detect remarkable spectral variability where the hardest observed spectral index within the LAT energy range is 1.52 +/- 0.14, and the softest one is 2.51 +/- 0.20. These unexpected spectral changes do not correlate with the measured flux variations above 0.3GeV. In this paper, we also present the first results from the 4.5-month-long multifrequency campaign (2009 March 15 - August 1) on Mrk 501, which included the VLBA, Swift, RXTE, MAGIC and VERITAS, the F-GAMMA, GASP-WEBT, and other collaborations and instruments which provided…
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.
