Unprecedented study of the broadband emission of Mrk 421 during flaring activity in March 2010
The MAGIC Collaboration: J. Aleksi\'c (1), S. Ansoldi (2), L. A., Antonelli (3), P. Antoranz (4), A. Babic (5), P. Bangale (6), U. Barres de, Almeida (6,25), J. A. Barrio (7), J. Becerra Gonz\'alez (8,26), W. Bednarek, (9), E. Bernardini (10), B. Biasuzzi (2), A. Biland (11)

TL;DR
This study provides a comprehensive multiwavelength analysis of the March 2010 flaring activity of Mrk 421, modeling the spectral energy distributions with one-zone and two-zone SSC models to understand the physical mechanisms behind the observed variability.
Contribution
It is the first detailed multi-instrument study of Mrk 421's 2010 flare, demonstrating that simple SSC models can explain the broadband variability with minimal parameter changes.
Findings
X-ray and VHE bands showed significant flux variability.
Both one-zone and two-zone SSC models fit the daily SEDs well.
Particle population variations primarily drive the observed SED changes.
Abstract
A flare from the TeV blazar Mrk 421, occurring in March 2010, was observed for 13 consecutive days from radio to very high energy (VHE, E > 100 GeV) gamma-rays with MAGIC, VERITAS, Whipple, FermiLAT, MAXI, RXTE, Swift, GASP-WEBT, and several optical and radio telescopes. We model the day-scale SEDs with one-zone and two-zone synchrotron self-Compton (SSC) models, investigate the physical parameters, and evaluate whether the observed broadband SED variability can be associated to variations in the relativistic particle population. Flux variability was remarkable in the X-ray and VHE bands while it was minor or not significant in the other bands. The one-zone SSC model can describe reasonably well the SED of each day for the 13 consecutive days. This flaring activity is also very well described by a two-zone SSC model, where one zone is responsible for the quiescent emission while the…
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