`Violent` gamma-ray outbursts near supermassive black holes

An international team of astronomers led by Lars Fuhrmann from the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy in Bonn, Germany, used some of the best single-dish radio telescopes for several years, in combination with NASA`s Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope, to study the place where high energy outbursts occur.

Washington: An international team of astronomers led by Lars Fuhrmann from the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy in Bonn, Germany, used some of the best single-dish radio telescopes for several years, in combination with NASA`s Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope, to study the place where high energy outbursts occur.

For the first time a connection between dramatic outbursts of high energy gamma-ray emission and their counterparts at many radio frequencies has been established for a large sample of galaxies.
Measuring delays in time between these events finally produced better constraints on the exact location in the vicinity of supermassive black holes where the gamma-ray outbursts take place.

Special types of distant active galaxies and their innermost central regions show extreme physical processes.

In the vicinity of a spinning supermassive black hole (billions of times heavier than our Sun) an enormous amount of energy is released, often in the most energetic form of light: high energy gamma-ray photons at mega- or even gigaelectronvolt (MeV/GeV) energies.
This energy output is produced by feeding the black hole from surrounding stars, gas and dust. Matter is spiraling in onto the black hole and strong magnetic fields channel some of the infalling gas into two powerful, well collimated "jets" of plasma accelerating away from the center with velocities approaching the speed of light.

Many of the connected physical processes are not understood in detail so far, for example the production of high-energy gamma-ray photons and their place of origin inside the jet, or the origin of strong outbursts of emission across the whole electromagnetic spectrum.

New instruments and observing programs covering a large fraction of the whole energy spectrum nearly simultaneously allow new insights into the extreme physics of these objects to be obtained.

Using a combination of three of the world`s most advanced single-dish radio observatories, namely the Effelsberg 100-m, IRAM 30-m and APEX 12-m telescopes covering quasi-simultaneously 11 radio frequency bands (the so-called Fermi-GST AGN Multi-frequency Monitoring Alliance, F-GAMMA program), the team of scientists was able to monitor the frequently occurring radio outbursts of about 60 powerful active galaxies over many years.

"Since the era of the EGRET instrument on the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory in the 1990s, it has been discussed whether outbursts of radio emission are physically connected to similar events occurring at gamma rays" Anton Zensus, Director at the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy (MPIfR) and Fermi Affiliated Scientist said.

"Now with the combination of F-GAMMA radio and Fermi gamma-ray long-term data, and thanks to special analysis techniques, we finally know it!" he added.

In addition to radio data within the F-GAMMA program, the research team used gamma-ray observations of NASA`s Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope (launched in 2008), and a new statistical method to add up many radio and gamma-ray events.

The results are published in the current issue of `Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society` (Oxford University Press).

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