A lower bound on intergalactic magnetic fields from time variability of 1ES 0229+200 from MAGIC and Fermi/LAT observations
MAGIC Collaboration: V. A. Acciari, I. Agudo, T. Aniello, S. Ansoldi,, L. A. Antonelli, A. Arbet Engels, M. Artero, K. Asano, D. Baack, A. Babi\'c,, A. Baquero, U. Barres de Almeida, J. A. Barrio, I. Batkovi\'c, J. Becerra, Gonz\'alez, W. Bednarek, E. Bernardini, M. Bernardos

TL;DR
This study uses multi-year gamma-ray observations of the blazar 1ES 0229+200 to set a lower limit on intergalactic magnetic field strength by analyzing the absence of delayed GeV emission.
Contribution
It provides a more robust lower bound on the intergalactic magnetic field strength based on source variability and long-term gamma-ray data analysis.
Findings
Lower bound B>1.8e-17 G for long correlation length IGMF
No evidence of delayed GeV emission detected
Constraints are more conservative and robust than previous estimates
Abstract
Extended and delayed emission around distant TeV sources induced by the effects of propagation of gamma rays through the intergalactic medium can be used for the measurement of the intergalactic magnetic field (IGMF). We search for delayed GeV emission from the hard-spectrum TeV blazar 1ES 0229+200 with the goal to detect or constrain the IGMF-dependent secondary flux generated during the propagation of TeV gamma rays through the intergalactic medium. We analyze the most recent MAGIC observations over a 5 year time span and complement them with historic data of the H.E.S.S. and VERITAS telescopes along with a 12-year long exposure of the Fermi/LAT telescope. We use them to trace source evolution in the GeV-TeV band over one-and-a-half decade in time. We use Monte Carlo simulations to predict the delayed secondary gamma-ray flux, modulated by the source variability, as revealed by…
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