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Extragalactic Gamma-Ray Astrophysics

<!--HTML-->During the last decades, various classes of radio-loud active galactic nuclei have been established as sources of high-energy radiation extending over a very broad range from soft gamma-rays (photon energies E~MeV) up to very-high-energy gamma-rays (E>100 GeV). These include blaz...

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Autor principal: Stawarz, Lukasz
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2216218
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author Stawarz, Lukasz
author_facet Stawarz, Lukasz
author_sort Stawarz, Lukasz
collection CERN
description <!--HTML-->During the last decades, various classes of radio-loud active galactic nuclei have been established as sources of high-energy radiation extending over a very broad range from soft gamma-rays (photon energies E~MeV) up to very-high-energy gamma-rays (E>100 GeV). These include blazars of different types, as well as young and evolved radio galaxies. The observed gamma-ray emission from such implies efficient particle acceleration processes taking place in highly magnetized and relativistic jets produced by supermassive black holes, processes that have yet to be identified and properly understood. In addition, nearby starforming and starburst galaxies, some of which host radio-quiet Seyfert-type nuclei, have been detected in the gamma-ray range as well. In their cases, the observed gamma-ray emission is due to non-thermal activity in the interstellar medium, possibly including also a contribution from accretion disks and nuclear outflows. Finally, the high-energy emission from clusters of galaxies remains elusive, although the upper limits provided in this respect by Fermi-LAT and ground-based Cherenkov Telescopes, are at this point already very constraining. Those upper limits, along with many other results gathered on extragalactic gamma-ray sources -- e.g., timing properties of gamma-ray flares in blazar sources, energetics of the extended gamma-ray lobes in radio galaxies, or spectral characteristics of starburst galaxies in gamma-rays -- challenge the standard model of cosmic-ray origin and propagation, and in particular the paradigm of the shock acceleration that plays a major role in the cosmic ray production. Still, in many respect the extragalactic gamma-ray astrophysics is a relatively young field, keeping in mind that a large fraction of the gamma-ray emitters detected in the Fermi-LAT all-sky survey remains unidentified. This constitutes a space for potential new exciting discoveries with future CTA or planned MeV satellite missions, in a combination with already operating neutrino and ultra-high-energy cosmic ray experiments, as it is among such unidentified gamma-ray emitters we may expect to find new classes of extragalactic sources of high-energy emission and particles.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2016
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spelling cern-22162182022-11-02T22:21:54Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2216218engStawarz, LukaszExtragalactic Gamma-Ray AstrophysicsTeV Particle Astrophysics 2016Conferences & Workshops<!--HTML-->During the last decades, various classes of radio-loud active galactic nuclei have been established as sources of high-energy radiation extending over a very broad range from soft gamma-rays (photon energies E~MeV) up to very-high-energy gamma-rays (E>100 GeV). These include blazars of different types, as well as young and evolved radio galaxies. The observed gamma-ray emission from such implies efficient particle acceleration processes taking place in highly magnetized and relativistic jets produced by supermassive black holes, processes that have yet to be identified and properly understood. In addition, nearby starforming and starburst galaxies, some of which host radio-quiet Seyfert-type nuclei, have been detected in the gamma-ray range as well. In their cases, the observed gamma-ray emission is due to non-thermal activity in the interstellar medium, possibly including also a contribution from accretion disks and nuclear outflows. Finally, the high-energy emission from clusters of galaxies remains elusive, although the upper limits provided in this respect by Fermi-LAT and ground-based Cherenkov Telescopes, are at this point already very constraining. Those upper limits, along with many other results gathered on extragalactic gamma-ray sources -- e.g., timing properties of gamma-ray flares in blazar sources, energetics of the extended gamma-ray lobes in radio galaxies, or spectral characteristics of starburst galaxies in gamma-rays -- challenge the standard model of cosmic-ray origin and propagation, and in particular the paradigm of the shock acceleration that plays a major role in the cosmic ray production. Still, in many respect the extragalactic gamma-ray astrophysics is a relatively young field, keeping in mind that a large fraction of the gamma-ray emitters detected in the Fermi-LAT all-sky survey remains unidentified. This constitutes a space for potential new exciting discoveries with future CTA or planned MeV satellite missions, in a combination with already operating neutrino and ultra-high-energy cosmic ray experiments, as it is among such unidentified gamma-ray emitters we may expect to find new classes of extragalactic sources of high-energy emission and particles.oai:cds.cern.ch:22162182016
spellingShingle Conferences & Workshops
Stawarz, Lukasz
Extragalactic Gamma-Ray Astrophysics
title Extragalactic Gamma-Ray Astrophysics
title_full Extragalactic Gamma-Ray Astrophysics
title_fullStr Extragalactic Gamma-Ray Astrophysics
title_full_unstemmed Extragalactic Gamma-Ray Astrophysics
title_short Extragalactic Gamma-Ray Astrophysics
title_sort extragalactic gamma-ray astrophysics
topic Conferences & Workshops
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/2216218
work_keys_str_mv AT stawarzlukasz extragalacticgammarayastrophysics
AT stawarzlukasz tevparticleastrophysics2016