Exploring the connection between radio and GeV-TeV gamma-ray emission in the 1FHL and 2FHL AGN samples
R. Lico, M. Giroletti, M. Orienti, L. Costamante, V. Pavlidou, F., D'Ammando, F. Tavecchio

TL;DR
This study investigates the relationship between radio and gamma-ray emissions in blazars, revealing that correlation strength varies with gamma-ray energy range and blazar subtype, especially highlighting a significant link in high synchrotron peaked objects.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of radio and gamma-ray emission correlations across different energy ranges and blazar sub-classes using large, unbiased Fermi-LAT samples, clarifying the connection at very high energies.
Findings
Radio and gamma-ray emissions above 10 GeV are uncorrelated overall, except in HSP blazars.
A strong correlation exists between radio and 0.1-300 GeV gamma-ray emissions across all blazar types.
Correlation behavior varies with gamma-ray energy range and blazar sub-class, influenced by spectral energy distribution properties.
Abstract
The Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) revealed that blazars, representing the most extreme radio-loud active galactic nuclei (AGN) population, dominate the census of the gamma-ray sky, and a significant correlation was found between radio and gamma-ray emission in the 0.1-100 GeV energy range. However, the possible connection between radio and very high energy (VHE, E>0.1 TeV) emission still remains elusive, owing to the lack of a homogeneous coverage of the VHE sky. The main goal of this work is to quantify and assess the significance of a possible connection between the radio emission on parsec scale measured by the very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) and GeV-TeV gamma-ray emission in blazars, which is a central issue for understanding the blazar physics and the emission processes. We investigate the radio VLBI and high energy gamma-ray emission by using two large and unbiased AGN…
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