Abstract
We present the dissection in space, time, and energy of the region around the IceCube-170922A neutrino alert. This study is motivated by: (1) the first association between a neutrino alert and a blazar in a flaring state, TXS 0506+056; (2) the evidence of a neutrino flaring activity during 2014-2015 from the same direction; (3) the lack of an accompanying simultaneous γ -ray enhancement from the same counterpart; (4) the contrasting flaring activity of a neighbouring bright γ -ray source, the blazar PKS 0502+049, during 2014-2015. Our study makes use of multiwavelength archival data accessed through Open Universe tools and includes a new analysis of Fermi-LAT data. We find that PKS 0502+049 contaminates the γ -ray emission region at low energies but TXS 0506+056 dominates the sky above a few GeV. TXS 0506+056, which is a very strong (top percent) radio and γ -ray source, is in a high γ -ray state during the neutrino alert but in a low though hard γ -ray state in coincidence with the neutrino flare. Both states can be reconciled with the energy associated with the neutrino emission and, in particular during the low/hard state, there is evidence that TXS 0506+056 has undergone a hadronic flare with very important implications for blazar modelling. All multimessenger diagnostics reported here support a single coherent picture in which TXS 0506+056, a very high energy γ -ray blazar, is the only counterpart of all the neutrino emissions in the region and therefore the most plausible first non-stellar neutrino and, hence, cosmic ray source.
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Padovani, P., Giommi, P., Resconi, E., Glauch, T., Arsioli, B., Sahakyan, N., & Huber, M. (2018). Dissecting the region around IceCube-170922A: The blazar TXS 0506+056 as the first cosmic neutrino source. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 480(1), 192–203. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/sty1852
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