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Recently the IceCube collaboration and 15 other collaborations reported the spatial and temporal coincidence between the neutrino event IceCube-170922A and the radio-TeV activity of the blazar TXS 0506+056. Their further analysis on 9.5 years of IceCube data discovered neutrino flare between September 2014 and March 2015, when TXS 0506+056 is however in quiescent state. We analyze the Fermi-LAT data in that direction, and find another bright GeV source PKS 0502+049, which is at an angle of $1.2^{circ}$ from TXS 0506+056, with strong activties during the neutrino flare. No other bright GeV source was detected in the region of interest. Though PKS 0502+049 is $1.2^circ$ separated from TXS 0506+056, it locates within the directional reconstruction uncertainties of 7 neutrinos, out of the 13 neutrino events during the neutrino flare. Together with the observed high flux of the $gamma$-ray flare, it may be unreasonable to fully discard the (partial) contribution of PKS 0502+049 to the neutrino flare. The single source assumption used in the neutrino data analysis might need to be revisited.
Recent results from IceCube regarding TXS 0506+056 suggest the presence of neutrino flares that are not temporally coincident with a significant corresponding gamma ray flare. Such flares are particularly difficult to identify, as their presence must
Although many high-energy neutrinos detected by the IceCube telescope are believed to have anextraterrestrial origin, their astrophysical sources remain a mystery. Recently, an unprecedenteddiscovery of a high-energy muon neutrino event coincident wi
A recent time-integrated analysis of a catalog of 110 candidate neutrino sources revealed a cumulative neutrino excess in the data collected by IceCube between April 6, 2008 and July 10, 2018. This excess, inconsistent with the background hypothesis
Solar flares convert magnetic energy into thermal and non-thermal plasma energy, the latter implying particle acceleration of charged particles such as protons. Protons are injected out of the coronal acceleration region and can interact with dense p
We present an all-sky search for muon neutrinos produced during the prompt $gamma$-ray emission of 1172 gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) with the IceCube Neutrino Observatory. The detection of these neutrinos would constitute evidence for ultra-high energy co