Modeling spectral lags in active galactic nucleus flares in the context of Lorentz invariance violation searches
Perennes C\'edric, Sol H\'el\`ene, Bolmont Julien

TL;DR
This paper investigates intrinsic spectral lags in VHE AGN flares within SSC models to distinguish source effects from potential Lorentz invariance violation signals, emphasizing the importance of accounting for source-intrinsic delays in LIV studies.
Contribution
It introduces a simple VHE flare model in blazars to analyze how physical parameters influence intrinsic delays, highlighting their potential to overshadow LIV effects and guiding future observational strategies.
Findings
Intrinsic lags can dominate over LIV effects at low redshifts.
Two regimes of spectral lags are identified: long-lasting and fast particle acceleration.
Detection of these intrinsic lags with CTA can constrain AGN flare models and LIV searches.
Abstract
High-energy photons emitted by flaring active galactic nuclei (AGNs) have been used for many years to constrain modified dispersion relations in vacuum encountered in the context of quantum gravity phenomenology. In such studies, done in the GeV-TeV range, energy-dependent delays (spectral lags) are searched for, usually neglecting any source-intrinsic time delay. With the aim being to distinguish lorentz invariance violation (LIV) effects from lags generated at the sources themselves, a detailed investigation into intrinsic spectral lags in flaring AGNs above 100 GeV is presented in the frame of synchrotron-self-Compton (SSC) scenarios for their very-high-energy (VHE) emission. A simple model of VHE flares in blazars is proposed, allowing to explore the influence of the main physical parameters describing the emitting zones on intrinsic delays. For typical conditions expected in TeV…
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