Gamma-rays from young radio galaxies and quasars
Giacomo Principe, Leonardo Di Venere, Monica Orienti, Giulia Migliori,, Filippo D'Ammando, Mario Nicola Mazziotta, Marcello Giroletti

TL;DR
This study analyzes over 11 years of Fermi-LAT data to investigate gamma-ray emission from 162 young radio sources, detecting significant emission from 11 and setting upper limits on the collective emission of undetected sources.
Contribution
First comprehensive gamma-ray analysis of a large sample of young radio sources, including the first stacking analysis to constrain their collective emission.
Findings
Detected gamma-ray emission from 11 sources, including a new detection from PKS 1007+142.
The collective emission of undetected sources is below Fermi-LAT detection thresholds.
Upper limits on gamma-ray flux provide constraints for theoretical models.
Abstract
According to radiative models, radio galaxies and quasars are predicted to produce gamma rays from the earliest stages of their evolution. Exploring their high-energy emission is crucial for providing information on the most energetic processes, the origin and the structure of the newly born radio jets. Taking advantage of more than 11 years of \textit{Fermi}-LAT data, we investigate the gamma-ray emission of 162 young radio sources (103 galaxies and 59 quasars), the largest sample of young radio sources used so far for such a gamma-ray study. We separately analyze each source and perform the first stacking analysis of this class of sources to investigate the gamma-ray emission of the undetected sources. We detect significant gamma-ray emission from 11 young radio sources, four galaxies and seven quasars, including the discovery of significant gamma-ray emission from the compact radio…
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