Probing Neutrino Emission from X-ray Blazar Flares observed with Swift-XRT

Video Player is loading.
Loaded: 0%
Remaining Time 0:00
1x
  • Quality
    • 113 views

    • 0 favorites

    • uploaded July 6, 2021

    Discussion timeslot (ZOOM-Meeting): 12. July 2021 - 18:00
    ZOOM-Meeting URL: https://desy.zoom.us/j/91896950007
    ZOOM-Meeting ID: 91896950007
    ZOOM-Meeting Passcode: ICRC2021
    Corresponding Session: https://icrc2021-venue.desy.de/channel/25-Blazars-AGN-MM/61
    Live-Stream URL: https://icrc2021-venue.desy.de/livestream/Discussion-06/7

    Abstract:
    "Blazars are a subclass of active galaxies with jets closely aligned to the observer's line of sight. In addition, they are the most powerful persistent sources across the electromagnetic spectrum in the universe. The detection of a high-energy neutrino from the flaring blazar TXS 0506+056 and the subsequent discovery of a neutrino excess from the same direction have naturally strengthened the hypothesis that blazars are cosmic neutrino sources. The lack, however, of gamma-ray flaring activity during the latter period challenges the standard scenario of correlated gamma-ray and high-energy neutrino emission in blazars. Motivated by a novel theoretical scenario where neutrinos are produced by energetic protons interacting with their own X-ray synchrotron photons, we make neutrino predictions for X-ray flaring blazars. Our sample consists of all blazars observed with the X-ray Telescope (XRT) on board Swift more than 50 times from November 2004 to November 2020. To statistically identify an X-ray flaring state we apply the Bayesian Block algorithm to the 1 keV XRT light curves of frequently observed blazars. Using X-ray spectral information during the flaring states, we compute for each flare the 1-10 keV energy fluence, which is a good proxy for the all-flavor neutrino fluence in the adopted theoretical scenario. We present the expected number of muon neutrino events with IceCube for each source as well as the stacked signal from all X-ray flares of the selected sample. We discuss the implications of our results for IceCube and IceCube Gen-2."

    Authors: Stamatios Ilias Stathopoulos
    Co-Authors: Maria Petropoulou | Paolo Giommi | Apostolos Mastichiadis | Paolo Padovani
    Indico-ID: 991
    Proceeding URL: https://pos.sissa.it/395/1008

    Tags:
    Presenter:

    Stamatios Ilias Stathopoulos


    Additional files

    More Media in "Multi-Messenger"