Discovery of TeV gamma-ray emission from PKS 0447-439 and derivation of an upper limit on its redshift
H.E.S.S. Collaboration:, A. Abramowski, F. Acero, A.G., Akhperjanian, G. Anton, S. Balenderan, A. Balzer, A. Barnacka and, Y. Becherini, J. Becker Tjus, B. Behera, K. Bernl\"ohr, E. Birsin, and J. Biteau, A. Bochow, C. Boisson, J. Bolmont, P. Bordas and, J. Brucker, F. Brun

TL;DR
This paper reports the detection of very high-energy gamma-ray emission from the blazar PKS 0447-439 using H.E.S.S., analyzes its multi-wavelength data, and constrains its redshift to be less than 0.59 based on combined observations.
Contribution
First detection of TeV gamma-ray emission from PKS 0447-439 and derivation of an upper redshift limit using combined gamma-ray and multi-wavelength data.
Findings
Detected TeV gamma-ray emission with a photon index of 3.89.
Observed rapid flux variability in X-ray and UV bands.
Constrained the redshift to be less than 0.59.
Abstract
Very high-energy gamma-ray emission from PKS 0447-439 was detected with the H.E.S.S. Cherenkov telescope array in December 2009. This blazar is one of the brightest extragalactic objects in the Fermi Bright Source List and has a hard spectrum in the MeV to GeV range. In the TeV range, a photon index of 3.89 +- 0.37 (stat) +- 0.22 (sys) and a flux normalisation at 1 TeV, Phi(1 TeV) = (3.5 +- 1.1 (stat) +- 0.9 (sys)) x 10^{-13} cm^{-2} s^{-1} TeV^{-1}, were found. The detection with H.E.S.S. triggered observations in the X-ray band with the Swift and RXTE telescopes. Simultaneous UV and optical data from Swift UVOT and data from the optical telescopes ATOM and ROTSE are also available. The spectrum and light curve measured with H.E.S.S. are presented and compared to the multi-wavelength data at lower energies. A rapid flare is seen in the Swift XRT and RXTE data, together with a flux…
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.
