Detection of minute-timescale gamma-ray variability in BL Lacertae by Fermi-LAT
Ashwani Pandey, C.S. Stalin

TL;DR
This paper reports the first detection of minute-timescale gamma-ray variability in BL Lacertae, revealing an extremely compact emission region and providing new insights into jet physics in blazars.
Contribution
It presents the first observation of sub-2-minute gamma-ray variability in a blazar, constraining the size and location of the emission region with implications for jet dynamics.
Findings
Detected 1-minute gamma-ray flux halving time
Inferred a very compact emission region within the jet
Estimated a minimum Doppler factor of 15
Abstract
BL Lacertae, the prototype of the BL Lacertae (BL Lac) category of blazars, underwent a giant ray flare in April 2021. The Large Area Telescope (LAT) onboard the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope (hereafter Fermi-LAT) observed a peak ray (0.1500 GeV) flux of 2 10 photons cm s within a single orbit on 2021 April 27, which is historically the brightest ray flux ever detected from the source. Here, we report, for the first time, the detection of significant minute-timescale GeV ray flux variability in the BL Lac subclass of blazars by the Fermi-LAT. We resolved the source variability down to 2-min binned timescales with a flux halving time of 1 minute, which is the shortest GeV variability timescale ever observed from blazars. The detected variability timescale is much shorter than the light-crossing time ($\sim…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Particle physics theoretical and experimental studies · Dark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena
