Detection of very high energy gamma-ray emission from the gravitationally lensed blazar QSO B0218+357 with the MAGIC telescopes
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Tiivistelmä
Context. QSO B0218+357 is a gravitationally lensed blazar located at a
redshift of 0.944. The gravitational lensing splits the emitted
radiation into two components that are spatially indistinguishable by
gamma-ray instruments, but separated by a 10-12 day delay. In July 2014,
QSO B0218+357 experienced a violent flare observed by the Fermi-LAT and
followed by the MAGIC telescopes.
Aims: The spectral energy
distribution of QSO B0218+357 can give information on the energetics of
z 1 very high energy gamma-ray sources. Moreover the gamma-ray
emission can also be used as a probe of the extragalactic background
light at z 1.
Methods: MAGIC performed observations of QSO
B0218+357 during the expected arrival time of the delayed component of
the emission. The MAGIC and Fermi-LAT observations were accompanied by
quasi-simultaneous optical data from the KVA telescope and X-ray
observations by Swift-XRT. We construct a multiwavelength spectral
energy distribution of QSO B0218+357 and use it to model the source. The
GeV and sub-TeV data obtained by Fermi-LAT and MAGIC are used to set
constraints on the extragalactic background light.
Results: Very
high energy gamma-ray emission was detected from the direction of QSO
B0218+357 by the MAGIC telescopes during the expected time of arrival of
the trailing component of the flare, making it the farthest very high
energy gamma-ray source detected to date. The observed emission spans
the energy range from 65 to 175 GeV. The combined MAGIC and Fermi-LAT
spectral energy distribution of QSO B0218+357 is consistent with current
extragalactic background light models. The broadband emission can be
modeled in the framework of a two-zone external Compton scenario, where
the GeV emission comes from an emission region in the jet, located
outside the broad line region.