The First GeV Outburst of the Radio-loud Narrow Line Seyfert 1 galaxy PKS 1502+036
Vaidehi S. Paliya, and C. S. Stalin

TL;DR
This paper reports the first GeV gamma-ray outburst from the radio-loud narrow line Seyfert 1 galaxy PKS 1502+036, analyzing its spectral energy distribution and comparing it with other gamma-ray sources to understand its emission mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides the first detection of a GeV outburst from PKS 1502+036 and models its broadband emission using a one-zone leptonic model, revealing insights into the emission region and jet dynamics.
Findings
Highest gamma-ray flux detected from PKS 1502+036
Emission region likely outside the broad line region but inside the torus
Gamma-ray flaring SED resembles that of flat-spectrum radio quasars
Abstract
The -ray loud narrow line Seyfert 1 (-NLSy1) galaxy PKS 1502+036 () exhibited its first -ray outburst on 2015 December 20. In the energy range of 0.1-300 GeV, the highest flux measured by {\it Fermi}-Large Area Telescope is (3.90 1.52) 10 ph cm s, which is the highest -ray flux ever detected from this object. The associated spectral shape is soft () and this corresponds to an isotropic -ray luminosity of (1.2 0.6) 10 erg s. We generate the broadband spectral energy distribution (SED) during the GeV flare and reproduce it using a one zone leptonic emission model. The optical-UV spectrum can be explained by a combination of synchrotron and the accretion disk emission, whereas, the X-ray to -ray SED can be satisfactorily…
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