Testing emission models on the extreme blazar 2WHSP J073326.7+515354 detected at very high energies with the MAGIC telescopes
MAGIC Collaboration: V. A. Acciari (1), S. Ansoldi (2,23), L. A., Antonelli (3), A. Arbet Engels (4), D. Baack (5), A. Babi\'c (6), B. Banerjee, (7), U. Barres de Almeida (8), J. A. Barrio (9), J. Becerra Gonz\'alez (1),, W. Bednarek (10), L. Bellizzi (11), E. Bernardini (12,16)

TL;DR
This paper reports the detection of an extreme high-energy peaked BL Lac object at TeV energies with MAGIC, analyzing its broad-band spectral energy distribution and testing various theoretical emission models.
Contribution
First detection of the EHBL 2WHSP J073326.7+515354 at TeV energies with detailed multi-wavelength analysis and comparison of different emission models.
Findings
The source's SED confirms its classification as an EHBL.
Standard one-zone leptonic models struggle to fit the SED.
Complex jet models better reproduce the observed emission.
Abstract
Extreme high-energy peaked BL Lac objects (EHBLs) are an emerging class of blazars. Their typical two-hump structured spectral energy distribution (SED) peaks at higher energies with respect to conventional blazars. Multi-wavelength (MWL) observations constrain their synchrotron peak in the medium to hard X-ray band. Their gamma-ray SED peaks above the GeV band, and in some objects it extends up to several TeV. Up to now, only a few EHBLs have been detected in the TeV gamma-ray range. In this paper, we report the detection of the EHBL 2WHSP J073326.7+515354, observed and detected during 2018 in TeV gamma rays with the MAGIC telescopes. The broad-band SED is studied within a MWL context, including an analysis of the Fermi-LAT data over ten years of observation and with simultaneous Swift-XRT, Swift-UVOT, and KVA data. Our analysis results in a set of spectral parameters that confirms the…
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