Multiband variability studies and novel broadband SED modeling of Mrk 501 in 2009
M. L. Ahnen (1), S. Ansoldi (2), L. A. Antonelli (3), P. Antoranz (4),, A. Babic (5), B. Banerjee (6), P. Bangale (7), U. Barres de Almeida (7,24),, J. A. Barrio (8), J. Becerra Gonz\'alez (9,25), W. Bednarek (10), E., Bernardini (11,26), A. Berti (2,27), B. Biasuzzi (2)

TL;DR
This study analyzes multi-instrument observations of Mrk 501 in 2009, revealing energy-dependent variability, exploring broadband SED modeling with SSC scenarios, and highlighting the complexity of flaring mechanisms in blazars.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive multi-wavelength dataset and applies a grid-scan approach to SSC models, demonstrating degeneracy and the need for multi-zone models for certain flares.
Findings
Higher variability at VHE gamma-rays compared to X-rays.
One-zone SSC models cannot explain the 2009 May 22 flare.
Two-zone SSC models can adequately describe the flare.
Abstract
We present an extensive study of the BL Lac object Mrk 501 based on a data set collected during the multi-instrument campaign spanning from 2009 March 15 to 2009 August 1 which includes, among other instruments, MAGIC, VERITAS, Whipple 10-m, Fermi-LAT, RXTE, Swift, GASP-WEBT and VLBA. We find an increase in the fractional variability with energy, while no significant interband correlations of flux changes are found in the acquired data set. The higher variability in the very high energy (>100 GeV, VHE) gamma-ray emission and the lack of correlation with the X-ray emission indicate that the highest-energy electrons that are responsible for the VHE gamma-rays do not make a dominant contribution to the ~1 keV emission. Alternatively, there could be a very variable component contributing to the VHE gamma-ray emission in addition to that coming from the synchrotron self-Compton (SSC)…
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