X- and Gamma-ray astrophysics in the era of Multi-messenger astronomy
Giulia Stratta (INAF/IAPS, INAF/OAS, INFN-Roma), Andrea Santangelo, (IAAT)

TL;DR
This paper discusses the role of multi-messenger astronomy, combining electromagnetic, gravitational wave, and neutrino observations, in advancing our understanding of high-energy astrophysical sources and fundamental physics.
Contribution
It provides an overview of key astrophysical sources, recent breakthroughs, and the current and future observational facilities enabling multi-messenger astronomy.
Findings
Recent detection of gravitational waves associated with gamma-ray bursts.
Identification of a neutrino event linked to a flaring blazar.
Upcoming observatories will enhance multi-messenger detection capabilities.
Abstract
Multi-messenger astronomy is becoming a major avenue to explore the Universe. Several well known astrophysical sources are also expected to emit other 'messenger' than photons: namely cosmic rays, gravitational waves and neutrinos. These additional messengers bring complementary pieces of information to the ones carried by electromagnetic radiation and concur to draw a complete phenomenological picture of several astrophysical events as well as to measure key cosmological parameters. Indeed, it is widely believed in the astronomical community that several aspects of fundamental physics and cosmology will be unveiled only within the framework of multi-messenger astronomy. The most recent breakthrough discoveries of a gravitational wave source associated with a short gamma-ray burst, and of a neutrino event found to be spatially consistent with a flaring blazar, have already shown the key…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Neutrino Physics Research · Dark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena
