ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Very high energy gamma-ray emission of Fanaroff-Riley I objects is not univocally explained by a single emission model. Leptonic models with one and multi-zone emission regions, occurring in the jet of these objects, are usually used to describe the broadband spectral energy distribution. A correlation between the X-ray and TeV emission is naturally expected within leptonic models whereas a lack of correlation between these two observables represents a challenge and favors the hadronic scenarios. This is the case of M87 as we show here by analyzing its TeV and X-ray emission recorded in the last decade. Furthermore, we point out that the spectra obtained by MAGIC, H.E.S.S. and VERITAS telescopes cannot be described with the same leptonic model introduced by the Fermi-LAT collaboration. We introduce hadronic scenarios to explain the TeV gamma-ray fluxes of this radiogalaxy as products of Fermi-accelarated protons interacting with seed photons in the jet or thermal particles in the giant lobes. By fitting this part of spectral energy distribution as pion decay products, we obtain the expected neutrino counterpart and the luminosity of accelerating protons in the jet and/or lobes. With the expected neutrino fluxes we investigate, through Monte Carlo simulations, the possibility to see the signal from M87 with a Km$^{3}$ neutrino telescope, and compare the results with what has been seen by IceCube experiment up to now. Finally we constrain the features of giant lobes through the observations performed at ultra high energies by TA experiment.
M87 is a giant elliptical galaxy located in the centre of the Virgo cluster, which harbours a supermassive black hole of mass 6.4x10^9 M_sun, whose activity is responsible for the extended (80 kpc) radio lobes that surround the galaxy. The energy gen
During the last decade, M87s jet has been the site of an extraordinary variability event, with one knot (HST-1) increasing by over a factor 100 in brightness. Variability was also seen on timescales of months in the nuclear flux. Here we discuss the
We describe a Chandra X-ray ToO project designed to isolate the site of TeV flaring in the radio galaxy M87. To date, we have triggered the Chandra observations only once (2010 April) and by the time of the first of our 9 observations, the TeV flare
To obtain a better understanding of the location and mechanisms for the production of the gamma-ray emission in jets of AGN we present a detailed study of the HST-1 structure, 0.8 arcsec downstream the jet of M87, previously identified as a possible
In 2017, the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) Collaboration succeeded in capturing the first direct image of the center of the M87 galaxy. The asymmetric ring morphology and size are consistent with theoretical expectations for a weakly accreting superm