Rapid variability of Markarian 421 during extreme flaring as seen through the eyes of XMM-Newton
Abstract
By studying the variability of blazars across the electromagnetic spectrum, it is possible to resolve the underlying processes responsible for rapid flux increases, so-called flares. We report on an extremely bright X-ray flare in the high-peaked BL Lacertae object Markarian 421 (Mrk 421) that occurred simultaneously with enhanced γ-ray activity detected at very high energies by First G-APD Cherenkov Telescope on 2019 June 9. We triggered an observation with XMM-Newton, which observed the source quasi-continuously for 25 h. We find that the source was in the brightest state ever observed using XMM-Newton, reaching a flux of 2.8 × 10-9 $\mathrm{erg\, cm^{-2}\, s^{-1}}$ over an energy range of 0.3-10 keV. We perform a spectral and timing analysis to reveal the mechanisms of particle acceleration and to search for the shortest source-intrinsic time-scales. Mrk 421 exhibits the typical harder-when-brighter behaviour throughout the observation and shows a clock-wise hysteresis pattern, which indicates that the cooling dominates over the acceleration process. While the X-ray emission in different sub-bands is highly correlated, we can exclude large time lags as the computed z-transformed discrete correlation functions are consistent with a zero lag. We find rapid variability on time-scales of 1 ks for the 0.3-10 keV band and down to 300 s in the hard X-ray band (4-10 keV). Taking these time-scales into account, we discuss different models to explain the observed X-ray flare, and find that a plasmoid-dominated magnetic reconnection process is able to describe our observation best.
- Publication:
-
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
- Pub Date:
- April 2024
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:2402.19377
- Bibcode:
- 2024MNRAS.529.1450G
- Keywords:
-
- acceleration of particles;
- relativistic processes;
- galaxies: active;
- BL Lacertae objects: individual: Markarian 421;
- X-rays: galaxies;
- Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena
- E-Print:
- 13 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS