Back to Search Start Over

GAMMA-RAY ACTIVITY IN THE CRAB NEBULA: THE EXCEPTIONAL FLARE OF 2011 APRIL

Authors :
Martin C. Weisskopf
Stefan Funk
P. M. Saz Parkinson
Andrea Belfiore
Roger W. Romani
Matthew G. Baring
R. Buehler
Alice K. Harding
Francesco Massaro
Roger Blandford
Matthew Kerr
J. Chiang
Luca Baldini
Mn Mazziotta
J. E. Grove
Allyn F. Tennant
F. D'Ammando
E. Hays
Charles D. Dermer
E. Charles
Jeffrey D. Scargle
Buehler R
Scargle JD
Blandford RD
Baldini L
Baring MG
Belfiore A
Charles E
Chiang J
DAmmando F
Dermer CD
Funk S
Grove JE
Harding AK
Hays E
Kerr M
Massaro F
Mazziotta MN
Romani RW
Parkinson PMS
Tennant AF
Weisskopf MC
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

The Large Area Telescope on board the Fermi satellite observed a gamma-ray flare in the Crab Nebula lasting for approximately nine days in April of 2011. The source, which at optical wavelengths has a size of approximate to 11 lt-yr across, doubled its gamma-ray flux within eight hours. The peak photon flux was (186 +/- 6) x 10(-7) cm(-2) s(-1) above 100 MeV, which corresponds to a 30-fold increase compared to the average value. During the flare, a new component emerged in the spectral energy distribution, which peaked at an energy of (375 +/- 26) MeV at flare maximum. The observations imply that the emission region was likely relativistically beamed toward us and that variations in its motion are responsible for the observed spectral variability.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6f178e13a7faa96253dfd91d09957dfe