Detection of very high energy gamma-ray emission from the gravitationally-lensed blazar QSO B0218+357 with the MAGIC telescopes
MAGIC Collaboration: M. L. Ahnen (1), S. Ansoldi (2,24), L. A., Antonelli (3), P. Antoranz (4), C. Arcaro (5), A. Babic (6), B. Banerjee (7),, P. Bangale (8), U. Barres de Almeida (8,25), J. A. Barrio (9), J. Becerra, Gonz\'alez (10,26), W. Bednarek (11), E. Bernardini (12,27)

TL;DR
This paper reports the first detection of very high energy gamma-ray emission from the gravitationally-lensed blazar QSO B0218+357 at a redshift of 0.944, using MAGIC telescopes, providing insights into extragalactic background light and jet emission models.
Contribution
It presents the first VHE gamma-ray detection from QSO B0218+357, a gravitationally-lensed blazar at z=0.944, and models its emission with a two-zone external Compton scenario.
Findings
Detected VHE gamma-ray emission from QSO B0218+357 at 65-175 GeV.
The emission is consistent with extragalactic background light models.
The broad band emission is modeled with a two-zone external Compton scenario.
Abstract
Context. QSO B0218+357 is a gravitationally lensed blazar located at a redshift of 0.944. The gravitational lensing splits the emitted radiation into two components, spatially indistinguishable by gamma-ray instruments, but separated by a 10-12 day delay. In July 2014, QSO B0218+357 experienced a violent flare observed by the Fermi-LAT and followed by the MAGIC telescopes. Aims. The spectral energy distribution of QSO B0218+357 can give information on the energetics of z ~ 1 very high energy gamma- ray sources. Moreover the gamma-ray emission can also be used as a probe of the extragalactic background light at z ~ 1. Methods. MAGIC performed observations of QSO B0218+357 during the expected arrival time of the delayed component of the emission. The MAGIC and Fermi-LAT observations were accompanied by quasi-simultaneous optical data from the KVA telescope and X-ray observations by…
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