High Energy Polarization of Blazars : Detection Prospects
Nachiketa Chakraborty, Vasiliki Pavlidou, Brian Fields

TL;DR
This paper assesses the potential for current and future X-ray and gamma-ray polarimeters to detect polarized high-energy emission from blazars, which could reveal new insights into jet emission mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of detection prospects for blazar polarization using various polarimetry missions, highlighting the capabilities of space-based instruments to observe bright blazars.
Findings
Space-based missions can detect polarization fractions down to a few percent.
Flaring activity can increase detection rates by a factor of 5-6.
Balloon polarimeters have limited prospects for detecting blazar polarization.
Abstract
Emission from blazar jets in the ultraviolet, optical, and infrared is polarized. If these low-energy photons were inverse-Compton scattered, the upscattered high-energy photons retain a fraction of the polarization. Current and future X-ray and gamma-ray polarimeters such as INTEGRAL-SPI, PoGOLITE, X-Calibur, Gamma-Ray Burst Polarimeter, GEMS-like missions, ASTRO-H, and POLARIX have the potential to discover polarized X-rays and gamma-rays from blazar jets for the first time. Detection of such polarization will open a qualitatively new window into high-energy blazar emission; actual measurements of polarization degree and angle will quantitatively test theories of jet emission mechanisms. We examine the detection prospects of blazars by these polarimetry missions using examples of 3C 279, PKS 1510-089, and 3C 454.3, bright sources with relatively high degrees of low-energy…
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