Search for high-redshift blazars with Fermi/LAT
M. Kreter, A. Gokus, F. Krau{\ss}, M. Kadler, R. Ojha, S. Buson, J., Wilms, M. B\"ottcher

TL;DR
This study investigates high-redshift blazars using Fermi/LAT data, revealing several new distant gamma-ray sources and demonstrating that a significant fraction exhibit detectable gamma-ray activity despite their large distances.
Contribution
The paper presents the first systematic search for gamma-ray emission from a large sample of high-redshift blazars, identifying new distant gamma-ray sources and analyzing their activity patterns.
Findings
Half of the sample shows single-month gamma-ray activity.
Several new high-redshift gamma-ray blazars were detected.
The most distant gamma-ray blazar at z=4.72 was identified.
Abstract
High- blazars (z ) are the most powerful class of persistent -ray sources in the Universe. These objects possess the highest jet powers and luminosities and have black hole masses often in excess of solar masses. In addition, high- blazars are important cosmological probes and serve as test objects for blazar evolution models. Due to their large distance, their high-energy emission typically peaks below the GeV range, which makes them difficult to study with Fermi/LAT. Therefore, only the very brightest objects are detectable and, to date, only a small number of high-z blazars have been detected with Fermi/LAT. In this work, we studied the monthly binned long-term -ray emission of a sample of 176 radio and optically detected blazars that have not been reported as known -ray sources in the 3FGL catalog. In order to account for false-positive…
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