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Two active states of the narrow-line gamma-ray-loud AGN GB 1310+487

Authors :
Sokolovsky, K. V.
Schinzel, F. K.
Tanaka, Y. T.
Abolmasov, P. K.
Angelakis, E.
Bulgarelli, A.
Carrasco, L.
Cenko, S. B.
Cheung, C. C.
Clubb, K. I.
D'Ammando, F.
Escande, L.
Fegan, S. J.
Filippenko, A. V.
Finke, J. D.
Fuhrmann, L.
Fukazawa, Y.
Hays, E.
Healey, S. E.
Ikejiri, Y.
Itoh, R.
Kawabata, K. S.
Komatsu, T.
Kovalev, Yu. A.
Kovalev, Y. Y.
Krichbaum, T. P.
Larsson, S.
Lister, M. L.
Lott, B.
Max-Moerbeck, W.
Nestoras, I.
Pittori, C.
Pursimo, T.
Pushkarev, A. B.
Readhead, A. C. S.
Recillas, E.
Richards, J. L.
Riquelme, D.
Romani, R. W.
Sakimoto, K.
Sasada, M.
Schmidt, R.
Shaw, M. S.
Sievers, A.
Thompson, D. J.
Uemura, M.
Ungerechts, H.
Vercellone, S.
Verrecchia, F.
Yamanaka, M.
Yoshida, M.
Zensus, J. A.
Source :
Astronomy & Astrophysics 565 (2014) A26
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Previously unremarkable, the extragalactic radio source GB 1310+487 showed a gamma-ray flare on 2009 November 18, reaching a daily flux of ~10^-6 photons/cm^2/s at energies E>100 MeV and becoming one of the brightest GeV sources for about two weeks. Its optical spectrum is not typical for a blazar, instead, it resembles those of narrow emission-line galaxies. We investigate changes of the object's radio-to-GeV spectral energy distribution (SED) during and after the prominent GeV flare with the aim to determine the nature of the object and constrain the origin of the variable high-energy emission. The data collected by the Fermi and AGILE satellites at gamma-ray energies, Swift at X-ray and ultraviolet, Kanata, NOT, and Keck telescopes at optical, OAGH and WISE at infrared, and IRAM 30m, OVRO 40m, Effelsberg 100m, RATAN-600, and VLBA at radio, are analysed together to trace the SED evolution on timescales of months. The gamma-ray/radio-loud narrow-line active galactic nucleus (AGN) is located at redshift z=0.638. It is shining through an unrelated foreground galaxy at z=0.500. The AGN light is likely amplified by a factor of a few because of gravitational lensing. The AGN SED shows a two-humped structure typical of blazars and gamma-ray-loud NLSy1 galaxies, with the high-energy (inverse-Compton) emission dominating by more than an order of magnitude over the low-energy (synchrotron) emission during gamma-ray flares. The difference between the two SED humps is smaller during the low-activity state. Fermi observations reveal a strong correlation between the gamma-ray flux and spectral index, with the hardest spectrum observed during the brightest gamma-ray state. If the gamma-ray flux is a mixture of synchrotron self-Compton (SSC) and external Compton (EC) emission, the observed GeV spectral variability may result from varying relative contributions of these two emission components.<br />Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures, 6 tables; accepted to A&A

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Astronomy & Astrophysics 565 (2014) A26
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1401.2151
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201220703