1. Very High-energy Gamma-Ray Episodic Activity of Radio Galaxy NGC 1275 in 2022-2023 Measured with MACE
- Author
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Godambe, S., Mankuzhiyil, N., Borwankar, C., Ghosal, B., Tolamatti, A., Pal, M., Chandra, P., Khurana, M., Pandey, P., Dar, Z. A., Godiyal, S., Hariharan, J., Anand, Keshav, Norlha, S., Sarkar, D., Thubstan, R., Venugopal, K., Pathania, A., Kotwal, S., Kumar, Raj, Bhatt, N., Chanchalani, K., Das, M., Singh, K. K., Gour, K. K., Kothari, M., Kumar, Nandan, Kumar, Naveen, Marandi, P., Kushwaha, C. P., Koul, M. K., Dorjey, P., Dorji, N., Chitnis, V. R., Rannot, R. C., Bhattacharyya, S., Chouhan, N., Dhar, V. K., Sharma, M., and Yadav, K. K.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The radio galaxy NGC 1275, located at the central region of Perseus cluster, is a well-known very high-energy (VHE) gamma-ray emitter. The Major Atmospheric Cherenkov Experiment Telescope has detected two distinct episodes of VHE (E > 80 GeV) gamma-ray emission from NGC 1275 during 2022 December and 2023 January. The second outburst, observed on 2023 January 10, was the more intense of the two, with flux reaching 58$\%$ of the Crab Nebula flux above 80 GeV. The differential energy spectrum measured between 80 GeV and 1.5 TeV can be described by a power law with a spectral index of $\Gamma = - 2.90 \pm 0.16_{stat}$ for both flaring events. The broadband spectral energy distribution derived from these flares, along with quasisimultaneous low-energy counterparts, suggests that the observed gamma-ray emission can be explained using a homogeneous single-zone synchrotron self-Compton model. The physical parameters derived from this model for both flaring states are similar. The intermediate state observed between two flaring episodes is explained by a lower Doppler factor or magnetic field, which subsequently returned to its previous value during the high-activity state observed on 2023 January 10., Comment: 7 Pages, 5 Figures, and 1 Table
- Published
- 2024
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