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Centaurus A: hard X-ray and soft gamma-ray lightcurve correlation

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Sissa Medialab

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Centaurus A (Cen A), powered by a 55 million solar mass supermassive black hole, has been intensively monitored in all accessible wavelength ranges of the electromagnetic spectrum. However, its gamma-ray flux, both in the H.E.S.S. very-high and the Fermi-LAT high-energy gamma-ray regimes, is relatively faint, hampering lightcurve analyses. Yet, the extensive long-term light curve data from Fermi-LAT and Swift-BAT (hard X-rays) allows for cross-correlation studies. We find a hint that X-ray emission from Cen A precedes the gamma rays by 25 days. If this lag is real and related to a gamma-gamma absorption effect in the broad-line region (BLR) around the central source, then we can constrain the size of the BLR using light-travel time arguments. These are first results of extended light curve correlation studies between high-energy gamma rays and X-rays from Cen A

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Davids, I.D. et al. 2017. Centaurus A: hard X-ray and soft gamma-ray lightcurve correlation. 5th Annual Conference on High Energy Astrophysics in Southern Africa (HEASA), 4-6 Oct 2017, University of the Witwatersrand (Wits), South Africa. Proceedings of science, 319: art. #10. [https://doi.org/10.22323/1.319.0010]

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