Image by M. Kornmesser/ESO
Image by Harold A. Peña Herazo
An international team of
astronomers has unveiled the nature of hundreds of gamma-ray emitting
sources, discovering that most of them belong to the class of active
galaxies known as blazars.
Their recent study was published in The Astronomical Journal.
One
of the most intriguing challenges in modern gamma-ray astronomy is
searching for low-energy counterparts of unidentified gamma-ray sources.
Unidentified sources constitute about 1/3 of all celestial objects
detected by the Fermi satellite to date, the most recent gamma-ray
mission with unprecedented capabilities for observing the high energy
sky.
Since the
largest population of known gamma-ray sources are blazars, astronomers
believe they can also classify most unidentified gamma-ray sources as
blazars. However, they can completely understand their nature only by
observing blazar candidates at visible frequencies.
Blazars
are extremely rare, black hole-powered galaxies. They host a
supermassive black hole in their central regions that sweep out matter
at almost the speed of light in the form of a powerful jet pointing
towards the Earth. Particles accelerated in these jets can emit light up
to the most energetic gamma-rays, thus being visible by instruments
onboard the Fermi satellite.
The team, led by Dr. Harold Peña Herazo from Mexico's National Institute of Astrophysics, Optics, and Electronics (INAOE), analyzed hundreds of optical spectra collected by the Large Sky Area Multi-Object Fabre Spectroscopic Telescope (LAMOST) at the Xinglong Station in China.
LAMOST is hosted by National Astronomical Observatories of Chinese Academy of Sciences. It provided a unique opportunity to unveil the nature of blazar-like sources that can potentially be counterparts of unidentified gamma-ray sources.
From the list of sources discovered by the Fermi satellite, the researchers selected a sample of Blazar Candidates of Uncertain type (BCUs), which share several properties in common with blazars. However, optical spectroscopic observations are necessary to determine their proper classification and confirm their nature.
Using spectroscopic data available in the LAMOST archive, the researchers were able to classify tens of BCUs as blazars. "LAMOST data also permitted verifying the nature of hundreds of additional blazars by searching for emission or absorption lines used to determine their cosmological distances," said Prof. GU Minfeng from Shanghai Astronomical Observatory of Chinese Academy of Sciences.
The vast majority of sources belong to the blazar class known as BL Lac objects and have a completely featureless optical spectrum. This makes measuring their cosmological distances an extremely challenging task. However, thanks to the LAMOST observations, a few more of them have luckily revealed visible signatures in their optical spectra.
"Our analysis showed great potential for the LAMOST survey and allowed us to discover a few changing-look blazars," said Dr. Peña Herazo, currently a postdoctoral fellow at the East Asian Observatory.
"It is worth noting that the possibility of using LAMOST observations to estimate blazar cosmological distances is critical to studying this population, its cosmological evolution, the imprint in the extragalactic gamma-ray background light in the gamma-ray spectra, and the blazar contribution to the extragalactic gamma-ray background," said Prof. Francesco Massaro from the University of Turin.
"I started working on this optical campaign and analyzing spectroscopic data in 2015, and nowadays, thanks to the observations available in LAMOST archive, we certainly made a significant step toward the identification of gamma-ray sources with blazars. Future perspectives achievable thanks to LAMOST datasets will definitively reveal the nature of hundreds of new blazars in the years to come," commented Dr. Federica Ricci at Bologna University and INAF-OAS.
The group’s previous study was also published in The Astronomical Journal.
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