X-ray spectral studies of TeV gamma-ray emitting blazars
Alicja Wierzcholska, Stefan Wagner

TL;DR
This study analyzes X-ray spectra of 29 TeV gamma-ray blazars observed over 10 years, revealing insights into their emission components, variability, and electron distributions, with implications for understanding high-energy astrophysical processes.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive spectral analysis of multiple blazars, highlighting the coexistence of synchrotron and inverse Compton components and their variability patterns.
Findings
Superposition of synchrotron and inverse Compton components observed in some sources.
Flux variability is more pronounced in the synchrotron domain than in the Compton domain.
The X-ray spectral shape remains stable despite flux changes, indicating complex electron distribution behaviors.
Abstract
This work is a summary of the X-ray spectral studies of 29 TeV -ray emitting blazars observed with Swift/XRT, especially focusing on sources for which X-ray regime allows to study the low and the high energy ends of the particle distributions function. Variability studies require simultaneous coverage, ideally sampling different flux states of each source. This is achieved using X-ray observations by disentangling the high-energy end of the synchrotron emission and the low-energy end of the Compton emission, which are produced by the same electron population. We focused on a sample of 29 TeV gamma-ray emitting blazars with the best signal-to-noise X-ray observations collected with Swift/XRT in the energy range of 0.3-10 keV during 10 years of Swift/XRT operations. We investigate the X-ray spectral shapes and the effects of different corrections for neutral hydrogen absorption…
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