Detection of the BL Lac Object 1H1426+428 at TeV Gamma Ray Energies

  • 8 February 2002
Abstract
A very high energy gamma-ray signal has been detected at the 5.5 sigma level from 1H1426+428, an x-ray selected BL Lacertae object at a redshift of 0.129. The object was monitored from 1995 - 1998 with the Whipple 10m imaging atmospheric Cerenkov telescope as part of a general blazar survey; the results of these observations, although not statistically significant, were consistently positive. X-ray observations of 1H1426+428 during 1999 with the BeppoSAX instrument revealed that the peak of its synchrotron spectrum occurs at > 100 keV, leading to the prediction of observable TeV emission from this object. 1H1426+428 was monitored extensively at the Whipple Observatory during the 1999, 2000, and 2001 observing seasons. The strongest TeV signals were detected in 2000 and 2001. During 2001, an integral flux of 2.04 +/- 0.35 x 10^(-11) cm^(-2} s^(-1) above 280 GeV was recorded from 1H1426+428. The detection of 1H1426+428 supports the idea that, as also seen in Markarian 501 and 1ES2344+514, BL Lacertae objects with extremely high synchrotron peak frequencies produce gamma-rays in the TeV range.

This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: