6533b7defe1ef96bd12768e4

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Gamma-Ray Flares from Mrk421 in 2008 observed with the ARGO-YBJ detector

G. AielliC. BacciB. BartoliP. BernardiniB. XjC. BleveP. BranchiniA. BudanoS. BussinoA. Calabrese MelcarneP. CamarriZ. CaoA. CappaR. CardarelliS. CatalanottiC. CattaneoP. CelioS. ChenY. ChenN. ChengP. CretiS. CuiB. DaiG. D'ali'staiti DanzengluobuM. DattoliI. De MitriB. D’ettorre PiazzoliM. De VincenziT. Di GirolamoX. DingG. Di SciascioC. FengZ. FengZ. FengF. GaleazziP. GaleottiR. GarganaQ. GouY. GuoH. HhH. HbiH. HboQ. HuangM. IacovacciR. IuppaI. JamesH. Jia LabacirenL. HjL. JyL. XxB. LibertiG. LiguoriC. LiuC. LiuJ. LiuM. LiuH. LuM. XhG. MancarellaS. MariG. MarsellaD. MartelloS. MastroianniX. MengP. MontiniC. NingA. PagliaroM. PanareoL. PerroneP. PistilliQ. XbE. RossiF. RuggieriL. SaggeseP. SalviniR. SantonicoP. ShenX. ShengF. ShiC. StanescuA. SurdoY. TanP. VallaniaS. VernettoC. VigoritoB. WangH. WangW. CyW. HrB. XuL. XueY. YanQ. YangX. YangA. YuanM. ZhaH. ZhangJ. ZhangJ. ZhangL. ZhangP. ZhangX. ZhangY. Zhang ZhaxisangzhuX. ZhouF. ZhuQ. ZhuG. Zizzi

subject

Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical PhenomenaFOS: Physical sciencesFluxAstrophysicsBL Lacertae objectSettore FIS/05 - Astronomia E AstrofisicaExtended Air showersSettore FIS/05 - Astronomia e Astrofisicageneral" ["gamma rays]BlazarBL Lacertae objects; Markarian 421; gamma rays; Extended Air showersCherenkov radiationHigh Energy Astrophysical Phenomena (astro-ph.HE)PhysicsSpectral indexindividual (Markarian 421)" ["BL Lacertae objects]Markarian 421Settore FIS/01 - Fisica SperimentaleGamma rayindividual (Markarian 421) - gamma rays: observations [BL Lacertae objects]Astronomy and AstrophysicsAir showerCrab NebulaSpace and Planetary Sciencegamma rayIntergalactic travelAstrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena

description

In 2008 the blazar Markarian 421 entered a very active phase and was one of the brightest sources in the sky at TeV energies, showing frequent flaring episodes. Using the data of ARGO-YBJ, a full coverage air shower detector located at Yangbajing (4300 m a.s.l., Tibet, China), we monitored the source at gamma ray energies E > 0.3 TeV during the whole year. The observed flux was variable, with the strongest flares in March and June, in correlation with X-ray enhanced activity. While during specific episodes the TeV flux could be several times larger than the Crab Nebula one, the average emission from day 41 to 180 was almost twice the Crab level, with an integral flux of (3.6 +-0.6) 10^-11 photons cm^-2 s^-1 for energies E > 1 TeV, and decreased afterwards. This paper concentrates on the flares occurred in the first half of June. This period has been deeply studied from optical to 100 MeV gamma rays, and partially up to TeV energies, since the moonlight hampered the Cherenkov telescope observations during the most intense part of the emission. Our data complete these observations, with the detection of a signal with a statistical significance of 3.8 standard deviations on June 11-13, corresponding to a gamma ray flux about 6 times larger than the Crab one above 1 TeV. The reconstructed differential spectrum, corrected for the intergalactic absorption, can be represented by a power law with an index alpha = -2.1 extending up to several TeV. The spectrum slope is fully consistent with previous observations reporting a correlation between the flux and the spectral index, suggesting that this property is maintained in different epochs and characterizes the source emission processes.

10.1088/2041-8205/714/2/l208http://hdl.handle.net/2108/37348