Investigation of the energy dependence of the orbital light curve in LS 5039
Z. Chang, S. Zhang, L. Ji, Y.P. Chen, P. Kretschmar, E. Kuulkers,, W.Collmar, C.Z. Liu

TL;DR
This study analyzes the energy-dependent orbital light curves of LS 5039 across multiple wavelengths, revealing phase shifts in gamma-ray emission peaks and energy-specific modulation patterns, advancing understanding of high-energy processes in gamma-ray binaries.
Contribution
It provides the most comprehensive orbital light curves at hard X-ray and gamma-ray energies, uncovering phase-dependent shifts and energy-specific modulation behaviors in LS 5039.
Findings
Gamma-ray peak shifts near orbital phase 0.7 at energies below 100 MeV and above 1 TeV.
No orbital modulation detected between 3 and 20 GeV despite strong Fermi-LAT detection.
Power output peaks at phase 0.7 in TeV energies, with modulation patterns varying across energy bands.
Abstract
LS 5039 is so far the best studied -ray binary system at multi-wavelength energies. A time resolved study of its spectral energy distribution (SED) shows that above 1 keV its power output is changing along its binary orbit as well as being a function of energy. To disentangle the energy dependence of the power output as a function of orbital phase, we investigated in detail the orbital light curves as derived with different telescopes at different energy bands. We analysed the data from all existing \textit{INTEGRAL}/IBIS/ISGRI observations of the source and generated the most up-to-date orbital light curves at hard X-ray energies. In the -ray band, we carried out orbital phase-resolved analysis of \textit{Fermi}-LAT data between 30 MeV and 10 GeV in 5 different energy bands. We found that, at 100 MeV and 1 TeV the peak of the -ray emission is…
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