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Neutrinos, Cosmic Rays, and the MeV Band

Authors :
Ojha, R.
Zhang, H.
Kadler, M.
Neilson, N. K.
Kreter, M.
McEnery, J.
Buson, S.
Caputo, R.
Coppi, P.
D'Ammando, F.
De Angelis, A.
Fang, K.
Giannios, D.
Guiriec, S.
Guo, F.
Kopp, J.
Krauss, F.
Li, H.
Meyer, M.
Moiseev, A.
Petropoulou, M.
Prescod-Weinstein, C.
Rani, B.
Shrader, C.
Venters, T.
Wadiasingh, Z.
ITA
USA
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The possible association of the blazar TXS 0506+056 with a high-energy neutrino detected by IceCube holds the tantalizing potential to answer three astrophysical questions: 1. Where do high-energy neutrinos originate? 2. Where are cosmic rays produced and accelerated? 3. What radiation mechanisms produce the high-energy {\gamma}-rays in blazars? The MeV gamma-ray band holds the key to these questions, because it is an excellent proxy for photo-hadronic processes in blazar jets, which also produce neutrino counterparts. Variability in MeV gamma-rays sheds light on the physical conditions and mechanisms that take place in the particle acceleration sites in blazar jets. In addition, hadronic blazar models also predict a high level of polarization fraction in the MeV band, which can unambiguously distinguish the radiation mechanism. Future MeV missions with a large field of view, high sensitivity, and polarization capabilities will play a central role in multi-messenger astronomy, since pointed, high-resolution telescopes will follow neutrino alerts only when triggered by an all-sky instrument.<br />Comment: White paper submitted to the Astro2020 Decadal Survey

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c274fdaa8a853331aea848c6becdea56