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Aug 26 – 30, 2024
University of Chicago
America/Chicago timezone

Possible jet contribution to the γ-ray luminosity in NGC 1068

Not scheduled
20m

Speaker

Silvia Salvatore

Description

NGC 1068 is a nearby, widely studied Seyfert II galaxy presenting radio, infrared, X-ray, and γ-ray emission, along with strong
evidence for high-energy neutrino emission. Recently, the evidence for neutrino emission was explained in a multimessenger model,
whereby the neutrinos originate from the corona of the active galactic nucleus (AGN). In this environment, γ-rays are strongly
absorbed, so that an additional contribution is necessar, for instance, from the circumnuclear starburst ring. In this work, we discuss
whether the radio jet can be an alternative source of the γ-rays between about 0.1 and 100 GeV, as observed by Fermi-LAT. In
particular, we include both leptonic and hadronic processes, namely, accounting for inverse Compton emission and signatures from
pp as well as pγ interactions. In order to constrain our calculations, we used VLBA and ALMA observations of the radio knot
structures, which are spatially resolved at different distances from the supermassive black hole (SMBH). Our results show that the
best leptonic scenario for the prediction of the Fermi-LAT data is provided by the radio knot closest to the central engine. For that to
be the case, a magnetic field strength of ∼ 1 mG is needed as well as a strong spectral softening of the relativistic electron distribution
at (1 − 10) GeV. However, we show that neither such a weak magnetic field strength, nor such a strong softening is expected for that
knot. A possible explanation for the ∼ 10 GeV γ-rays could potentially be provided by hadronic pion production in case of a gas
density ≳ 104 cm−3 . Nonetheless, this process is not found to contribute significantly to the low-energy end of the Fermi-LAT range.
We conclude that the emission sites in the jet are not sufficient to explain the γ-rays across the whole Fermi-LAT energy band.

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