Gamma-ray observations of the microquasars Cygnus X-1, Cygnus X-3, GRS 1915+105, and GX 339-4 with the Fermi Large Area Telescope
Arash Bodaghee (1), John A. Tomsick (1), Katja Pottschmidt (2), Jerome, Rodriguez (3), Joern Wilms (4), Guy G. Pooley (5), ((1) SSL - UC Berkeley,, (2) CRESST/UMBC - NASA/GSFC, (3) CEA-Saclay, (4) Sternwarte/ECAP - Univ., Erlangen, Bamberg, (5) Univ. of Cambridge)

TL;DR
This study analyzes four microquasars using four years of Fermi-LAT gamma-ray data, detecting persistent gamma-ray emission from Cyg X-3 and providing new insights into their emission behaviors and detection conditions.
Contribution
It presents the first evidence of persistent gamma-ray emission from Cyg X-3 and refines detection conditions for microquasar gamma-ray emissions using extensive Fermi-LAT data.
Findings
Persistent gamma-ray emission detected from Cyg X-3.
Reproduction of previous gamma-ray outbursts of Cyg X-3.
Non-detection of GRS 1915+105 and GX 339-4 with upper flux limits.
Abstract
Detecting gamma-rays from microquasars is a challenging but worthwhile endeavor for understanding particle acceleration, the jet mechanism, and for constraining leptonic/hadronic emission models. We present results from a likelihood analysis on timescales of 1 d and 10 d of ~4 years worth of gamma-ray observations (0.1-10 GeV) by Fermi-LAT of Cyg X-1, Cyg X-3, GRS 1915+105, and GX 339-4. Our analysis reproduced all but one of the previous gamma-ray outbursts of Cyg X-3 as reported with Fermi or AGILE, plus 5 new days on which Cyg X-3 is detected at a significance of ~5-sigma that are not reported in the literature. In addition, Cyg X-3 is significantly detected on 10-d timescales outside of known gamma-ray flaring epochs which suggests that persistent gamma-ray emission from Cyg X-3 has been detected for the first time. For Cyg X-1, we find three low significance excesses (~3-4-sigma)…
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