Internal gamma gamma-opacity in Active Galactic Nuclei and the consequences for the TeV observations of M87 and Cen A
Katharina A. Brodatzki, David J. S. Pardy, Julia K. Becker and, Reinhard Schlickeiser

TL;DR
This paper investigates gamma-ray absorption in low luminosity active galactic nuclei, specifically M87 and Cen A, revealing different transparency levels for TeV photons and implications for their emission regions and accretion models.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed calculation of TeV photon absorption in the central regions of M87 and Cen A considering a low luminosity accretion disk, highlighting differences in their gamma-ray transparency.
Findings
M87's inner region is transparent for TeV up to 15 TeV
Cen A's inner region has high optical depth, leading to TeV absorption
Results suggest different gamma-ray production sites or accretion modes
Abstract
Low Luminosity Active Galactic Nuclei (LLAGNs) possess the characteristic features of more luminous Active Galactic Nuclei (AGNs) but exhibit a much lower nuclear Halpha luminosity than their more luminous counterparts. M87 (NGC 4486) and Centaurus A (NGC 5128, CenA) are well-studied nearby LLAGNs. As an additional feature they show gamma-radiation up to TeV (10^{12}eV) energies, but the origin of this radiation is not resolved. The coincident observation of a radio and TeV flare in M87 suggests that the TeV radiation is produced within around 50-100 gravitational radii of the central supermassive black hole, depending on the assumed value of the mass of the black hole. Strong radiation fields can be produced in the central region of an (LL)AGN, e.g., by the accretion flow around the black hole, the jet plasma, or stars closely orbiting the black hole. These radiation fields can lead to…
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