No Arabic abstract
The close relation between ground-based TeV observations and satellite borne $gamma$-ray measurements has been important for the understanding of blazars. The observations which involve the TeV component in blazar studies are reviewed.
The non-thermal spectra of blazars, observed from radio to GeV/TeV gamma-rays, reveal two pronounced components, both produced by radiation by energetic particles. One peaks in the IR - to soft X-ray band, radiating via the synchrotron process; the other, peaking in the high-energy gamma-rays, is produced by the Compton process. These spectra -- and, in particular, the asca data -- suggest that the origin of the seed photons for Comptonization is diverse. In the High-energy peaked BL Lac objects (HBLs), the dominant seed photons for Comptonization appear to be the synchrotron photons internal to the jet (SSC process). In the quasar-hosted blazars (QHBs), on the other hand, the X-ray band emission is still dominated by the SSC process, while the MeV to GeV range is produced by Comptonization of external photons such as the emission line light. In the context of this three-component model, we derive the magnetic field of 0.1 - 1 Gauss for all classes of blazars. Lorentz factors gamma_{peak} of electrons radiating at each peak of the nuFnu spectra are estimated to be ~10^{5}$ for HBLs; this is much higher than ~10^{3}$ for QHBs. This difference is consistent with the fact that the four sources that are known to emit TeV gamma-rays (TeV blazars) are all classified as HBLs. Among the TeV blazars, Mkn 421 is one of the brightest and most variable emitters from ultraviolet (eV) to hard gamma-ray (TeV) energies.The multi-frequency observations including TeV energy band provide the best opportunity to understand high-energy emission from blazar jets. In this paper, we discuss results of multi-frequency analysis and review the results of intensive campaigns for Mkn 421 from 1994 to 1998
In this first systematic attempt to characterise the intranight optical variability (INOV) of TeV detected blazars, we have monitored a well defined set of 9 TeV blazars on total 26 nights during 2004-2010. In this R (or V)-band monitoring programme only one blazar was monitored per night for a minimum duration of 4 hours. Using the CCD, an INOV detection threshold of ~ 1-2 % was achieved in the densely sampled DLCs. We have further expanded the sample by including another 13 TeV blazars from literature. This enlarged sample of 22 TeV blazars, monitored on a total of 116 nights (including 55 nights newly reported here), has enabled us to arrive at the first estimate of the INOV duty cycle of TeV detected blazars. Applying the C-test, the INOV DC is found to be 59 %, which decreases to 47 % if only INOV fractional amplitudes above 3 % are considered. These observations also permit, for the first time, a comparison of the INOV characteristics of the two major subclasses of TeV detected BL Lacs, namely LBLs and HBLs, for which we find the INOV DCs to be ~ 63 % and ~ 38 %, respectively. This demonstrates that the INOV differential between LBLs and HBLs persists even when only their TeV detected subsets are considered. Despite dense sampling, the intranight light curves of the 22 TeV blazars have not revealed even a single feature on time scale substantially shorter than 1 hour, even though the inner jets of TeV blazars are believed to have exceptionally large bulk Lorentz factors (and correspondingly stronger time compression). An intriguing feature, clearly detected in the light curve of the HBL J1555+1111, is a 4 per cent `dip on a 1 hour timescale. This unique feature could have arisen from absorption in a dusty gas cloud, occulting a superluminally moving optical knot in the parsec scale jet of this relatively luminous BL Lacs object.
The recently completed High Altitude Water Cherenkov (HAWC) gamma-ray observatory has been taking data with a partial array for more than one year and is now operating with >95% duty cycle in its full configuration. With an instantaneous field of view of 2 sr, two-thirds of the sky is surveyed every day at gamma-ray energies between approximately 100 GeV and 100 TeV. Any source location in the field of view can be monitored each day, with an exposure of up to $sim$ 6 hours. These unprecedented observational capabilities allow us to continuously scan the highly variable extra-galactic gamma-ray sky. By monitoring the flaring behavior of Active Galactic Nuclei we aim to significantly increase the observational data base for characterizing particle acceleration mechanisms in these sources and for studying cosmological properties like the extra-galactic background light. In this work we present first studies of data taken between June 2013 and July 2014 with a partial array configuration. Flux light curves, binned in week-long intervals, for the TeV-emitting blazars Markarian 421 and 501 are discussed with respect to indications of flaring states and we highlight coincident multi-wavelength observations. Results for both sources show indications of gamma-ray flare observations and demonstrate that a water Cherenkov detector can monitor TeV-scale variability of extra-galactic sources on weekly time scales. The analysis methods presented here can provide daily flux measurements with a minimum time interval of one transit and will be applied to new data from the completed HAWC array for monitoring of blazars and other transients.
We present the results of optical photometric observations of three extreme TeV blazars, 1ES 0229$+$200, 1ES 0414$+$009, and 1ES 2344$+$514, taken with two telescopes (1.3 m Devasthal Fast Optical Telescope, and 1.04 m Sampuranand Telescope) in India and two (1.4 m Milankovi{c} telescope and 60 cm Nedeljkovi{c} telescope) in Serbia during 2013--2019. We investigated their flux and spectral variability on diverse timescales. We examined a total of 36 intraday $R-$band light curves of these blazars for flux variations using the power-enhanced {it F}-test and the nested ANOVA test. No significant intraday variation was detected on 35 nights, and during the one positive detection the amplitude of variability was only 2.26 per cent. On yearly timescales, all three blazars showed clear flux variations in all optical wavebands. The weighted mean optical spectral index ($alpha_{BR}$), calculated using $B - R$ color indices, for 1ES 0229$+$200 was 2.09 $pm$ 0.01. We also estimated the weighted mean optical spectral indices of 0.67 $pm$ 0.01 and 1.37 $pm$ 0.01 for 1ES 0414$+$009, and 1ES 2344$+$514, respectively, by fitting a single power-law ($F_{ u} propto u^{-alpha}$) in their optical ({it VRI}) spectral energy distributions. A bluer-when-brighter trend was only detected in the blazar 1ES 0414$+$009. We briefly discuss different possible physical mechanisms responsible for the observed flux and spectral changes in these blazars on diverse timescales.
The INTEGRAL mission has played a major role in blazar science, thanks to its sensitive coverage of a spectral region (3-100 keV) that is critical for this type of sources, to its flexibility of scheduling and to the large field of view of its cameras. A number of flat-spectrum radio quasars (up to z ~ 3) and BL Lac objects were observed by INTEGRAL together with facilities at all wavelengths. These results have advanced our knowledge of blazars from a physical and cosmological point of view. This paper reviews some of these outcomes, with particular reference to the INTEGRAL program for blazars in outburst as targets of opportunity, with a perspective into a future of multi-messenger astronomy