Back to Search Start Over

POWERFUL HIGH-ENERGY EMISSION OF THE REMARKABLE BL LAC OBJECT S5 0716+714

Authors :
A. W. Chen
Marco Tavani
Alessandro Paggi
G. Pucella
Francesco Longo
Sergio Colafrancesco
A. Cavaliere
Luigi Pacciani
Andrea Bulgarelli
S. Vercellone
I. Donnarumma
Paolo Giommi
Filippo D'Ammando
A. Giuliani
V. Vittorini
Attilio Ferrari
Vittorini V
Tavani M
Paggi A
Cavaliere A
Bulgarelli A
Chen AW
DAmmando F
Donnarumma I
Giuliani A
Longo F
Pacciani L
Pucella G
Vercellone S
Ferrari A
Colafrancesco S
Giommi P
V., Vittorini
M., Tavani
A., Paggi
A., Cavaliere
A., Bulgarelli
A. W., Chen
F., D'Ammando
I., Donnarumma
A., Giuliani
Longo, Francesco
L., Pacciani
G., Pucella
S., Vercellone
A., Ferrari
S., Colafrancesco
P., Giommi
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

BL Lac objects of the intermediate subclass (IBLs) are known to emit a substantial fraction of their power in the energy range 0.1--10 GeV. Detecting gamma-ray emission from such sources provides therefore a direct probe of the emission mechanisms and of the underlying powerhouse. The AGILE gamma-ray satellite detected the remarkable IBL S5 0716+714 (z \simeq 0.3) during a high state in the period from 2007 September - October, marked by two very intense flares reaching peak fluxes of 200\times10^{-8} ph / cm^2 s above 100 MeV, with simultaneous optical and X-ray observations. We present here a theoretical model for the two major flares and discuss the overall energetics of the source. We conclude that 0716+714 is among the brightest BL Lac's ever detected at gamma-ray energies. Because of its high power and lack of signs for ongoing accretion or surrounding gas, the source is an ideal candidate to test the maximal power extractable from a rotating supermassive black hole via the pure Blandford-Znajek (BZ) mechanism. We find that during the 2007 gamma-ray flares our source approached or just exceeded the upper limit set by BZ for a black hole of mass 10^9 M_sun<br />12 pages, 3 figures

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e94802f6de377398ff3198c2fbde17fe