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Gamma radiation from the Crab pulsar wind nebula (PWN) shows significant variability at $sim100$ MeV energies, recently revealed with spaceborne gamma-ray telescopes. Here we report the results of a systematic search for gamma-ray flares using a 7.4-year data set acquired with the Fermi Large Area Telescope. Analyzing the off-pulse phases of the Crab pulsar, we found seven previously unreported low-intensity flares (small flares). The small flares originate from the variable synchrotron component of the Crab PWN and show clearly different features from the steady component of the Crab PWN emission. They are characterized by larger fluxes and harder photon indices, similar to previously reported flares. These flares show day-scale time variability and imply a strong magnetic field of $B_{rm min}approx 1~mathrm{mG}$ at the site of the gamma-ray production. This result seems to be inconsistent with the typical values revealed with modeling of the non-thermal emission from the nebula. The detection of the small flares gives a hint of production of gamma rays above $100$ MeV in a part of the nebula with properties which are different from the main emitters, e.g., due to bulk relativistic motion.
The well known Crab Nebula is at the center of the SN1054 supernova remnant. It consists of a rotationally-powered pulsar interacting with a surrounding nebula through a relativistic particle wind. The emissions originating from the pulsar and nebula
Using data from the Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT), we report the first clear gamma-ray measurement of a delay between flares from the gravitationally lensed images of a blazar. The delay was detected in B0218+357, a known double-image lensed syste
The Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) is the most sensitive instrument ever deployed in space for observing gamma-ray emission >100 MeV. This sensitivity has enabled the LAT to detect gamma-ray emission from the Sun during quiescent periods from pions
Gamma-ray emission from the Crab Nebula has been recently shown to be unsteady. In this paper, we study the flux and spectral variability of the Crab above 100 MeV on different timescales ranging from days to weeks. In addition to the four main inten
Subsequent to announcements by the AGILE and by the Fermi-LAT teams of the discovery of gamma-ray flares from the Crab Nebula in the fall of 2010, an international collaboration has been monitoring X-Ray emission from the Crab on a regular basis usin