Active galactic nuclei at gamma-ray energies
Charles Dennison Dermer, Berrie Giebels

TL;DR
Active Galactic Nuclei, especially blazars, are key gamma-ray sources with complex physics involving relativistic jets, and future telescopes will advance understanding of their emission mechanisms and role in cosmic phenomena.
Contribution
This paper reviews the current understanding of gamma-ray emitting active galactic nuclei, highlighting open questions and the potential of upcoming telescopes to address them.
Findings
Blazars dominate the extragalactic gamma-ray background.
Two classes of blazars are identified: FSRQ and BL Lac.
Misaligned radio galaxies are related to blazars.
Abstract
Active Galactic Nuclei can be copious extragalactic emitters of MeV-GeV-TeV gamma rays, a phenomenon linked to the presence of relativistic jets powered by a super-massive black hole in the center of the host galaxy. Most of gamma-ray emitting active galactic nuclei, with more than 1500 known at GeV energies, and more than 60 at TeV energies, are called "blazars". The standard blazar paradigm features a jet of relativistic magnetized plasma ejected from the neighborhood of a spinning and accreting super-massive black hole, close to the observer direction. Two classes of blazars are distinguished from observations: the flat-spectrum radio-quasar class (FSRQ) is characterized by strong external radiation fields, emission of broad optical lines, and dust tori. The BL Lac class (from the name of one of its members, BL Lacertae) corresponds to weaker advection-dominated flows with gamma-ray…
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