An active state of the BL Lac Object Markarian 421 detected by INTEGRAL in April 2013
E. Pian (1, 2, 3), M. Tuerler (4), M. Fiocchi (5), R. Boissay (4), A., Bazzano (5), L. Foschini (6), F. Tavecchio (6), V. Bianchin (1), G., Castignani (7), C. Ferrigno (4), C.M. Raiteri (8), M. Villata (8), V., Beckmann (9), F. D'Ammando (10, 11, 12), R. Hudec (13, 14)

TL;DR
This study reports multiwavelength observations of the blazar Mkn 421 during an active state in April 2013, revealing correlated spectral hardening, flares, and a possible time lag between high and low-frequency emissions, enhancing understanding of jet emission mechanisms.
Contribution
First detailed multiwavelength analysis of Mkn 421 during its active state in April 2013, showing spectral variability and timing correlations across optical to gamma-ray bands.
Findings
Detected two flares with correlated spectral hardening.
Observed a potential 70-minute delay of lower frequency emission.
Spectral energy distributions fit homogeneous synchrotron and SSC models.
Abstract
Multiwavelength variability of blazars offers indirect insight into their powerful engines and on the mechanisms through which energy is propagated from the centre down the jet. The BL Lac object Mkn 421 is a TeV emitter, a bright blazar at all wavelengths, and therefore an excellent target for variability studies. Mkn 421 was observed by INTEGRAL and Fermi-LAT in an active state on 16-21 April 2013. Well sampled optical, soft, and hard X-ray light curves show the presence of two flares. The average flux in the 20-100 keV range is 9.1e-11 erg/s/cm2 (~4.5 mCrab) and the nuclear average apparent magnitude, corrected for Galactic extinction, is V ~12.2. In the time-resolved X-ray spectra (3.5-60 keV), which are described by broken power laws and, marginally better, by log-parabolic laws, we see a hardening that correlates with flux increase, as expected in refreshed energy injections in a…
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