Skip to main content
New! October 18 GCN Classic Outage and Schema v4.2.0. See news and announcements

GCN Circular 36921

Subject
Fermi-LAT gamma-ray observations of IceCube-240721A
Date
2024-07-22T13:01:53Z (3 months ago)
From
Leo Pfeiffer at University of Würzburg <pfeiffer.leo@gmail.com>
Via
Web form
L. Pfeiffer (Univ. of Wuerzburg), S. Buson (DESY, Univ. of Wuerzburg), C. Bartolini (INFN Bari), S. Garrappa (Weizmann Institute of Science) and J. Sinapius (DESY) on behalf of the Fermi-LAT collaboration:

We report an analysis of observations of the vicinity of the high-energy IC-240721A neutrino event (GCN 36918) with all-sky survey data from the Large Area Telescope (LAT), on board the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope. The IceCube event was detected on 2024-07-21 16:17:25.8 UTC (T0) with J2000 position RA = 354.99 (+1.08, -1.14) deg, Decl. = 22.67 (+1.38, -1.14) deg 90% PSF containment.

No cataloged gamma-ray sources are found within the 90% IC-240721A localization error (Fourth Fermi-LAT catalog, 4FGL-DR4, The Fermi-LAT collaboration 2023, arXiv:2307.12546).

We searched for the existence of intermediate (days to years) timescale emission from a new gamma-ray transient source. Preliminary analysis indicates no significant (>5sigma) new excess emission (> 100 MeV) within the IC-240721A 90% confidence localization. Assuming a power-law spectrum (photon index = 2.0 fixed) for a point source at the IceCube best-fit position, the >100 MeV flux upper limit (95% confidence) is <2.01e-10 ph cm^-2 s^-1 for ~16-years (2008-08-04 / 2024-07-22 UTC), <1.06e-08(<8.26e-08) ph cm^-2 s^-1 for a 1-month (1-day) integration time before T0.

Since Fermi normally operates in an all-sky scanning mode, regular monitoring of this source will continue. For this source, the Fermi-LAT contact person is L. Pfeiffer (leonard.pfeiffer at stud-mail.uni-wuerzburg.de). 

The Fermi LAT is a pair conversion telescope designed to cover the energy band from 20 MeV to greater than 300 GeV. It is the product of an international collaboration between NASA and DOE in the U.S. and many scientific institutions across France, Italy, Japan and Sweden.
Looking for U.S. government information and services? Visit USA.gov