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The connection between radio and high energy emission in black hole powered systems in the SKA era

Authors :
Giroletti, M.
Orienti, M.
D'Ammando, F.
Massaro, F.
Tosti, G.
Lico, R.
Giovannini, G.
Agudo, I.
Alberdi, A.
Bignall, H.
Pandey-Pommier, M.
Wolter, A.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Strong evidence exists for a highly significant correlation between the radio flux density and gamma-ray energy flux in blazars revealed by Fermi. However, there are central issues that need to be clarified in this field: what are the counterparts of the about 30% of gamma-ray sources that are as yet unidentified? Are they just blazars in disguise or they are something more exotic, possibly associated with dark matter? How would they fit in the radio-gamma ray connection studied so far? With their superb sensitivity, SKA1-MID and SKA1-SUR will help to resolve all of these questions. Even more, while the radio-MeV/GeV connection has been firmly established, a radio-VHE connection has been entirely elusive so far. The advent of CTA in the next few years and the expected CTA-SKA1 synergy will offer the chance to explore this connection, even more intriguing as it involves the opposite ends of the electromagnetic spectrum and the acceleration of particles up to the highest energies. We are already preparing to address these questions by exploiting data from the various SKA pathfinders and precursors. We have obtained 18 cm European VLBI Network observations of E>10 GeV sources, with a detection rate of 83%. Moreover, we are cross correlating the Fermi catalogs with the MWA commissioning survey: when faint gamma-ray sources are considered, pure positional coincidence is not significant enough for selecting counterparts and we need an additional physical criterion to pinpoint the right object. It can be radio spectral index, variability, polarization, or compactness, needing high angular resolution in SKA1-MID; timing studies can also reveal pulsars, which are often found from dedicated searches of unidentified gamma-ray sources. SKA will be the ideal instrument for investigating these characteristics in conjunction with CTA. (abridged)<br />Comment: 12 pages, to be published in the proceedings of "Advancing Astrophysics with the Square Kilometre Array", PoS(AASKA14)153

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1501.03330
Document Type :
Working Paper