Fermi Large Area Telescope Detection of Two Very-High-Energy (E>100 GeV) Gamma-ray Photons from the z = 1.1 Blazar PKS 0426-380
Y. T. Tanaka, C. C. Cheung, Y. Inoue, L. Stawarz, M. Ajello, C. D., Dermer, D. L. Wood, A. Chekhtman, Y. Fukazawa, T. Mizuno, M. Ohno, D., Paneque, D. J. Thompson

TL;DR
This paper reports the detection of two very-high-energy gamma-ray photons from the distant blazar PKS 0426-380 by Fermi-LAT, establishing it as the most distant known VHE emitter and providing insights into gamma-ray variability and EBL constraints.
Contribution
First detection of VHE gamma-ray photons from a z=1.1 blazar, confirming its status as the most distant VHE gamma-ray emitter and supporting EBL models.
Findings
PKS 0426-380 is the most distant VHE gamma-ray emitter known.
Detection coincided with flaring states but lacked exact timing correlation.
Spectral hardening observed around the first VHE photon detection.
Abstract
We report the Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) detection of two very-high-energy (VHE, E>100 GeV) gamma-ray photons from the directional vicinity of the distant (redshift, z = 1.1) blazar PKS 0426-380. The null hypothesis that both the 134 and 122 GeV photons originate from unrelated sources can be rejected at the 5.5 sigma confidence level. We therefore claim that at least one of the two VHE photons is securely associated with the blazar, making PKS 0426-380 the most distant VHE emitter known to date. The results are in agreement with the most recent Fermi-LAT constraints on the Extragalactic Background Light (EBL) intensity, which imply a horizon for 100 GeV photons. The LAT detection of the two VHE gamma-rays coincided roughly with flaring states of the source, although we did not find an exact correspondence between the VHE photon arrival times and the flux…
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