Fermi Large Area Telescope Detection of Bright Gamma-ray Outbursts from a Peculiar Quasar 4C +21.35
Y. T. Tanaka, L. Stawarz, D. J. Thompson, F. D'Ammando, S. J. Fegan,, B. Lott, D. L. Wood, C. C. Cheung, J. Finke, S. Buson, L. Escande, S. Saito,, M. Ohno, T. Takahashi, D. Donato, J. Chiang, M. Giroletti, F. K. Schinzel, G., Iafrate, and F. Longo

TL;DR
This study reports on two years of Fermi-LAT observations of the peculiar blazar 4C +21.35, highlighting its bright gamma-ray outbursts, spectral features, and implications for jet power and emission region location.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of 4C +21.35's gamma-ray flares, spectral breaks, and constraints on the emission region's distance from the nucleus.
Findings
Major flares with day-scale rise and decay times.
Spectral breaks near 1-3 GeV during flares.
TeV detection suggests emission originates outside the broad line region.
Abstract
In this paper we report on the two-year-long Fermi-LAT observation of the peculiar blazar 4C +21.35 (PKS 1222+216). This source was in a quiescent state from the start of science operations of the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope in 2008 August until 2009 September, and then became more active, with gradually increasing flux and some moderately-bright flares. In 2010 April and June, 4C +21.35 underwent a very strong GeV outburst composed of several major flares characterized by rise and decay timescales of the order of a day. During the outburst, the GeV spectra of 4C +21.35 displayed a broken power-law form with spectral breaks observed near 1-3 GeV photon energies. We demonstrate that, at least during the major flares, the jet in 4C +21.35 carried a total kinetic luminosity comparable to the total accretion power available to feed the outflow. We also discuss the origin of the break…
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