Abstract
Abstract
Despite the uncovered association of a high-energy neutrino with the apparent flaring state of blazar TXS 0506+056 in 2017, the mechanisms leading to astrophysical particle acceleration and neutrino production are still uncertain. Recent studies found that when transparent to γ-rays, γ-flaring blazars do not have the opacity for protons to produce neutrinos. Here we present observational evidence for an alternative explanation, in which γ-ray emission is suppressed during efficient neutrino production. A large proton and target photon density helps produce neutrinos while temporarily suppressing the observable γ-emission due to a large γ
γ opacity. We show that the Fermi-LAT γ-flux of blazar PKS 1502+106 was at a local minimum when IceCube recorded the coincident high-energy neutrino IC-190730A. Using data from the OVRO 40 m Telescope, we find that radio emission from PKS 1502+106 at the time period of the coincident neutrino IC-190730A was in a high state, in contrast to earlier time periods when radio and γ fluxes are correlated for both low and high states. This points to an active outflow that is γ-suppressed at the time of neutrino production. We find similar local γ-suppression in other blazars, including in MAGIC’s TeV flux of TXS 0506+056 and Fermi-LAT’s flux of blazar PKS B1424-418 at the time of coincident IceCube neutrino detections. Using temporary γ-suppression, neutrino–blazar coincidence searches could be substantially more sensitive than previously assumed, enabling the identification of the origin of IceCube’s diffuse neutrino flux possibly with already existing data.
Funder
Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Publisher
American Astronomical Society
Subject
Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics
Cited by
30 articles.
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