Waiting times between gamma-ray flares of Flat Spectrum Radio Quasars, and constraints on emission processes
Luigi Pacciani (1) ((1) INAF-IAPS Via Fosso Del Cavaliere, 100,, I-00133 Rome Italy)

TL;DR
This study analyzes the timing of gamma-ray flares in Flat Spectrum Radio Quasars to understand their physical origin, using statistical methods to identify flare patterns and constrain emission mechanisms.
Contribution
It introduces a novel clustering method to identify flare peaks and characterizes the waiting-time distribution, revealing a fast component linked to specific radio features.
Findings
Flares follow a Poissonian process with overlapping bursts averaging 0.6 years.
A significant fast component in waiting times below 1 day was identified.
The fast component correlates with radio jet features and supports magnetic reconnection models.
Abstract
The physical scenario responsible for gamma-ray flaring activity and its location for Flat Spectrum Radio Quasars is still debated. The study of the statistical distribution of waiting-times between flares (the time intervals between consecutive activity peaks) can give information on the distribution of flaring times, and constrain the physical mechanism responsible for gamma-ray emission. We adopt here a Scan-Statistic driven clustering method (iSRS) to recognize flaring states within the FERMI-LAT data, and identify the time of activity-peaks. Results: Flares waiting times can be described with a poissonian process, consisting of a set of overlapping bursts of flares, with an average burst duration of about 0.6 year, and average rate of 1.3/y . For waiting times below 1d host-frame we found a statistically-relevant second population, the fast-component, mainly from CTA 102 data. The…
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.
