Search for very-high-energy gamma-ray emission from the microquasar Cygnus X-1 with the MAGIC telescopes
MAGIC Collaboration: M. L. Ahnen (1), S. Ansoldi (2,25), L. A., Antonelli (3), C. Arcaro (4), A. Babi\'c (5), B. Banerjee (6), P. Bangale, (7), U. Barres de Almeida (7,26), J. A. Barrio (8), J. Becerra Gonz\'alez, (9,10,27,28), W. Bednarek (11), E. Bernardini (12,29)

TL;DR
This study used the MAGIC telescopes to search for very-high-energy gamma-ray emission from Cygnus X-1 across different X-ray states, but found no detection and set upper limits on possible steady emission.
Contribution
The paper provides the first comprehensive VHE gamma-ray upper limits for Cygnus X-1 during different X-ray states using extensive MAGIC data from 2007 to 2014.
Findings
No VHE gamma-ray detection from Cygnus X-1.
Established upper limits for VHE emission above 200 GeV.
Ruled out steady VHE emission from jet-medium interactions.
Abstract
The microquasar Cygnus X-1 displays the two typical soft and hard X-ray states of a black-hole transient. During the latter, Cygnus X-1 shows a one-sided relativistic radio-jet. Recent detection of the system in the high energy (HE; MeV) gamma-ray range with \textit{Fermi}-LAT associates this emission with the outflow. Former MAGIC observations revealed a hint of flaring activity in the very high-energy (VHE; GeV) regime during this X-ray state. We analyze hr of Cygnus X-1 data taken with the MAGIC telescopes between July 2007 and October 2014. To shed light on the correlation between hard X-ray and VHE gamma rays as previously suggested, we study each main X-ray state separately. We perform an orbital phase-folded analysis to look for variability in the VHE band. Additionally, to place this variability behavior in a multiwavelength context, we…
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