An Emerging Class of Gamma-Ray Flares from Blazars: Beyond One-Zone Models
Marco Tavani, Valerio Vittorini, Alfonso Cavaliere

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new multi-zone model involving mirror scattering to explain high-luminosity gamma-ray flares in blazars, challenging traditional one-zone leptonic models and accounting for asymmetric flare lightcurves.
Contribution
It introduces a novel mirror-based scattering mechanism within blazar jets to explain gamma-ray flares beyond the scope of existing one-zone models.
Findings
Mirror scattering can enhance photon density and anisotropy within jets.
The model explains asymmetric gamma-ray flare lightcurves.
It offers a new framework for understanding transient gamma-ray activities in blazars.
Abstract
Blazars radiate from relativistic plasma jets with bulk Lorentz factors {\Gamma} ~ 10, closely aligned along our line of sight. In a number of blazars of the Flat Spectrum Radio Quasar type such as 3C 454.3 and 3C 279 gamma-ray flares have recently been detected with very high luminosity and little or no counterparts in the optical and soft X-ray bands. They challenge the current one-zone leptonic models of emissions from within the broad line region. The latter envisage the optical/X-ray emissions to be produced as synchrotron radiation by the same population of highly relativistic electrons in the jet that would also yield the gamma rays by inverse Compton up-scattering of surrounding soft photons. To meet the challenge we present here a model based on primary synchrotron photons emitted in the broad line region by a plasmoid moving out with the jet and scattered back toward the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
