Repeated patterns of gamma-ray flares suggest structured jets of blazars as likely neutrino sources

Author:

Novikova Polina1,Shishkina Ekaterina1,Blinov Dmitry23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. St. Petersburg State University , Universitetsky pr. 28, Petrodvoretz, 198504 St. Petersburg , Russia

2. Institute of Astrophysics, Foundation for Research and Technology - Hellas , Voutes, 7110 Heraklion , Greece

3. Department of Physics, University of Crete , 71003, Heraklion , Greece

Abstract

ABSTRACT Fermi-Large Area Telescope (LAT) observations provide continuous and regularly sampled measurements of gamma-ray photon flux for hundreds of blazars. Many of these light curves, spanning almost 15 yr, have been thoroughly examined for periodicity in multiple studies. However, the possibility that blazars may exhibit irregularly repeating flaring patterns in their gamma-ray light curves has not been systematically explored. In this study, we aim to find repeating episodes of flaring activity in the 100 brightest blazars using Fermi-LAT light curves with various integration times. We use a Bayesian Blocks representation to convert the time series into strings of symbols and search for repeating sub-strings using a fuzzy search algorithm. As a result, we identify 27 repeated episodes in the gamma-ray light curves of 10 blazars. We find that the patterns are most likely produced in structured jets composed of a fast spine and a slower sheath. When individual emission features propagate in the spine, they scatter seed photons produced in the non-uniform sheath through the inverse Compton mechanism, resulting in a set of gamma-ray flares with a similar profile every such passage. Additionally, we explore the theoretically predicted possibility that the spine-sheath structure facilitates the production of high-energy neutrinos in blazar jets. Using the catalogue of track-like events detected by the IceCube neutrino telescope, we find evidence supporting this hypothesis at a 2.8σ significance level.

Funder

Russian Science Foundation

European Research Council

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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