The first GeV flare of the radio-loud narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxy PKS 2004-447
Andrea Gokus, Vaidehi S. Paliya, Sarah M. Wagner, Sara Buson, Filippo, D'Ammando, Philip G. Edwards, Matthias Kadler, Manuel Meyer, Roopesh Ojha,, Jamie Stevens, J\"orn Wilms

TL;DR
This paper reports the first gamma-ray flare from the radio-loud NLSy 1 galaxy PKS 2004-447, analyzing multi-wavelength data to understand the variability and jet physics during the flare.
Contribution
It presents the first detection and detailed multi-wavelength analysis of a gamma-ray flare from PKS 2004-447, revealing jet behavior similar to blazars.
Findings
Gamma-ray flare reached a flux of (2.7±0.6)×10⁻⁶ ph cm⁻² s⁻¹
Flux-doubling times of ~2.2 hours at gamma-ray energies
Large Compton dominance observed during the flare
Abstract
On 2019 October 25, the Fermi-Large Area Telescope observed the first gamma-ray flare from the radio-loud narrow-line Seyfert 1 (NLSy 1) galaxy PKS 2004447 (). We report on follow-up observations in the radio, optical-UV, and X-ray bands that were performed by ATCA, the Neil Gehrels Swift observatory, XMM-Newton, and NuSTAR, respectively, and our multi-wavelength analysis. We study the variability across all energy bands and additionally produce -ray light curves with different time binnings to study the variability on short timescales during the flare. We examine the X-ray spectrum from 0.550 keV by describing the spectral shape with an absorbed power law. We analyse multi-wavelength datasets before, during, and after the flare and compare these with a low activity state of the source by modelling the respective SEDs with a one-zone synchrotron inverse Compton…
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