An intermittent extreme BL Lac: MWL study of 1ES 2344+514 in an enhanced state
MAGIC Collaboration: V. A. Acciari (1), S. Ansoldi (2,24), 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 study presents a comprehensive multi-wavelength analysis of the extreme BL Lac object 1ES 2344+514 during a 2016 flaring episode, revealing an unprecedented shift of its synchrotron peak and detailed spectral characteristics.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed broadband SED during a flaring state of 1ES 2344+514, combining multi-instrument data to model the emission with leptonic and hadronic scenarios.
Findings
VHE gamma-ray flux reached 55% of Crab flux above 300 GeV.
The inverse-Compton peak was characterized during a flare for the first time.
The synchrotron peak shifted to frequencies ≥10^18 Hz, indicating an extreme state.
Abstract
Extreme High-frequency BL~Lacs (EHBL) feature their synchrotron peak of the broadband spectral energy distribution (SED) at 10\,Hz. The BL~Lac object 1ES~2344+514 was included in the EHBL family because of its impressive shift of the synchrotron peak in 1996. During the following years, the source appeared to be in a low state without showing any extreme behaviours. In August 2016, 1ES~2344+514 was detected with the ground-based -ray telescope FACT during a high -ray state, triggering multi-wavelength (MWL) observations. We studied the MWL light curves of 1ES~2344+514 during the 2016 flaring state, using data from radio to VHE rays taken with OVRO, KAIT, KVA, NOT, some telescopes of the GASP-WEBT collaboration at the Teide, Crimean, and St. Petersburg observatories, \textit{Swift}-UVOT, \textit{Swift}-XRT, \textit{Fermi}-LAT, FACT and…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
