Probing AGN variability with the Cherenkov Telescope Array




Cangemi, F.; Hovatta, T.; Lindfors, E.; Cerruti, M.; Becerra-Gonzalez, J.; Biteau, J.; Boisson, C.; Böttcher, M.; De Gouveia Dal Pino, E.; Dorner, D.; Grolleron, G.; Lenain, J.P.; Manganaro, M.; Max-Moerbeck, W.; Morris, P.; Nilsson, K.; Reis, L.P.; Romano, P.; Sergijenko, O.; Tavecchio, F.; Vercellone, S.; Wagner, S.; and Zacharias, M. for the Cherenkov Telescope Array Consortium

Aharonian, Felix; Bordas, Pol; Bosch-Ramon, Valenti; Paredes, Josep M.; Ribó, Marc; Rieger, Frank M.

Heidelberg International Symposium on High-Energy Gamma-Ray Astronomy

PublisherSissa Medialab Srl

2024

POS Proceedings of Science

Proceedings of 7th Heidelberg International Symposium on High-Energy Gamma-Ray Astronomy

Proceedings of Science

093

417

1824-8039

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.22323/1.417.0093

https://doi.org/10.22323/1.417.0093

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/478133194



Relativistic jets launched by Active Galactic Nuclei are among the most powerful particle accelerators in the Universe. The emission over the entire electromagnetic spectrum of these relativistic jets can be extremely variable with scales of variability from less than few minutes up to several years. These variability patterns, which can be very complex, contain information about the acceleration processes of the particles and the area(s) of emission. Thanks to its sensitivity, five-to twenty-times better than the current generation of Imaging Atmospheric Cherenkov Telescopes depending on energy, the Cherenkov Telescope Array will be able to follow the emission from these objects with a very accurate time sampling and over a wide spectral coverage from 20 GeV to > 20 TeV and thus reveal the nature of the acceleration processes at work in these objects. We will show the first results of our lightcurve simulations and long-term behavior of AGN as will be observed by CTA, based on state-of-art particle acceleration models.

Last updated on 2025-21-10 at 08:21