7–11 Jul 2025
University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg
Africa/Johannesburg timezone
Registration open until 20 May 2025

Neutrino Emission from Bright Blazar Flares

Not scheduled
1h
Solomon Mahlangu House (University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg)

Solomon Mahlangu House

University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg

Oral Presentation Track D1 - Astrophysics Astrophysics & Space Science

Speaker

Joshua Robinson (North-West University)

Description

Blazars, a subclass of active galactic nuclei, have emerged as candidates for the sources of very-high-energy astrophysical neutrinos observed by the IceCube Neutrino Observatory. Notable temporal and spatial coincidences, particularly the event IceCube-170922A coinciding with a flare from TXS 0506+056, have sparked interest in the connection between these objects and neutrino production. In this study, we utilize the time-dependent lepto-hadronic code OneHaLe to fit the spectral energy distributions and light curves of bright gamma-ray flares from a sample of blazars detected by Fermi-LAT. In comparison to the calorimetric estimates of neutrino detection rates provided by Kreter et al. (2020), we model the flares with variations in proton injection spectra, allowing for a full assessment of neutrino production. Our findings reveal an overestimation in neutrino production rates using the calorimetric approach, typically by a factor of approximately 10, in cases where gamma-ray emissions are dominated by proton-synchrotron radiation. We also show that the non-detection of neutrinos during these flares does not necessarily imply a lack of relativistic protons within the jet, and shows that future-generation observatories may be able to detect the presence of said protons.
The work to be presented has been published in Robinson & Böttcher 2024 ApJ 977 42 (DOI 10.3847/1538-4357/ad8dce).

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Primary author

Joshua Robinson (North-West University)

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