P. Majumdar
Saha Institute of Nuclear Physics
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Publication
Featured researches published by P. Majumdar.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2013
S. Archambault; T. Arlen; T. Aune; B. Behera; M. Beilicke; W. Benbow; R. Bird; A. Bouvier; J. H. Buckley; V. Bugaev; K. L. Byrum; A. Cesarini; L. Ciupik; M. P. Connolly; W. Cui; M. Errando; A. Falcone; S. Federici; Q. Feng; J. P. Finley; L. Fortson; A. Furniss; N. Galante; D. Gall; G. H. Gillanders; S. Griffin; J. Grube; G. Gyuk; D. Hanna; J. Holder
We report the detection of a new TeV gamma-ray source, VER J0521+211, based on observations made with the VERITAS imaging atmospheric Cherenkov Telescope Array. These observations were motivated by the discovery of a cluster of >30 GeV photons in the first year of Fermi Large Area Telescope observations. VER J0521+211 is relatively bright at TeV energies, with a mean photon flux of (1.93 ± 0.13stat ± 0.78sys) × 10–11 cm–2 s–1 above 0.2 TeV during the period of the VERITAS observations. The source is strongly variable on a daily timescale across all wavebands, from optical to TeV, with a peak flux corresponding to ~0.3 times the steady Crab Nebula flux at TeV energies. Follow-up observations in the optical and X-ray bands classify the newly discovered TeV source as a BL Lac-type blazar with uncertain redshift, although recent measurements suggest z = 0.108. VER J0521+211 exhibits all the defining properties of blazars in radio, optical, X-ray, and gamma-ray wavelengths.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2013
E. Aliu; S. Archambault; B. Behera; K. Berger; M. Beilicke; W. Benbow; R. Bird; A. Bouvier; V. Bugaev; M. Cerruti; X. Chen; L. Ciupik; M. P. Connolly; W. Cui; J. Dumm; A. Falcone; S. Federici; Q. Feng; J. P. Finley; P. Fortin; L. Fortson; A. Furniss; N. Galante; G. H. Gillanders; S. Griffin; S. T. Griffiths; J. Grube; G. Gyuk; D. Hanna; J. Holder
We present the results of a multiwavelength observational campaign on the TeV binary system LS I +61° 303 with the VERITAS telescope array (>200 GeV), Fermi-LAT (0.3-300 GeV), and Swift/XRT (2-10 keV). The data were taken from 2011 December through 2012 January and show a strong detection in all three wavebands. During this period VERITAS obtained 24.9 hr of quality selected livetime data in which LS I +61° 303 was detected at a statistical significance of 11.9σ. These TeV observations show evidence for nightly variability in the TeV regime at a post-trial significance of 3.6σ. The combination of the simultaneously obtained TeV and X-ray fluxes do not demonstrate any evidence for a correlation between emission in the two bands. For the first time since the launch of the Fermi satellite in 2008, this TeV detection allows the construction of a detailed MeV-TeV spectral energy distribution from LS I +61° 303. This spectrum shows a distinct cutoff in emission near 4 GeV, with emission seen by the VERITAS observations following a simple power-law above 200 GeV. This feature in the spectrum of LS I +61° 303, obtained from overlapping observations with Fermi-LAT and VERITAS, may indicate that there are two distinct populations of accelerated particles producing the GeV and TeV emission.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2014
T. Ergin; A. Sezer; L. Saha; P. Majumdar; A. Chatterjee; A. Bayirli; E. N. Ercan
A group of middle-aged mixed-morphology (MM) supernova remnants (SNRs) interacting with molecular clouds (MC) has been discovered as strong GeV gamma-ray emitters by Large Area Telescope on board Fermi Gamma Ray Space Telescope (Fermi-LAT). The recent observations of the Suzaku X-ray satellite have revealed that some of these interacting gamma-ray emitting SNRs, such as IC443, W49B, W44, and G359.1-0.5, have overionized plasmas. 3C 391 (G31.9+0.0) is another Galactic MM SNR interacting with MC. It was observed in GeV gamma rays by Fermi-LAT as well as in the 0.3
The Astrophysical Journal | 2013
E. Aliu; S. Archambault; T. Arlen; T. Aune; M. Beilicke; W. Benbow; R. Bird; A. Bouvier; J. H. Buckley; V. Bugaev; A. Cesarini; L. Ciupik; M. P. Connolly; W. Cui; J. Dumm; M. Errando; A. Falcone; S. Federici; Q. Feng; J. P. Finley; P. Fortin; L. Fortson; A. Furniss; N. Galante; L. Gerard; G. H. Gillanders; S. Griffin; J. Grube; G. Gyuk; D. Hanna
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Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2014
Lab Saha; T. Ergin; P. Majumdar; M. Bozkurt; E. N. Ercan
10.0 keV X-ray band by Suzaku. In this work, 3C 391 was detected in GeV gamma rays with a significance of
The Astrophysical Journal | 2013
S. Archambault; M. Beilicke; W. Benbow; K. Berger; R. Bird; A. Bouvier; J. H. Buckley; V. Bugaev; K. L. Byrum; M. Cerruti; X. Chen; L. Ciupik; M. P. Connolly; W. Cui; C. Duke; J. Dumm; M. Errando; A. Falcone; S. Federici; Q. Feng; J. P. Finley; L. Fortson; A. Furniss; N. Galante; G. H. Gillanders; S. Griffin; S. T. Griffiths; J. Grube; G. Gyuk; D. Hanna
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The Astrophysical Journal | 2017
Raj Prince; P. Majumdar; Nayantara Gupta
18
arXiv: High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena | 2016
Amanda Weinstein; E. Aliu; S. Casanova; T. Di Girolamo; M. Dyrda; J. Hahn; P. Majumdar; J. Rodriguez; L. Tibaldo
\sigma
The Astrophysical Journal | 2015
T. Ergin; A. Sezer; Lab Saha; P. Majumdar; F. Gök; E. N. Ercan
and we showed that the GeV emission is point-like in nature. The GeV gamma-ray spectrum was shown to be best explained by the decay of neutral pions assuming that the protons follow a broken power-law distribution. We revealed radiative recombination structures of silicon and sulfur from 3C 391 using Suzaku data. In this paper we discuss the possible origin of this type of radiative plasma and hadronic gamma rays.
arXiv: High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena | 2011
P. Majumdar
We report on VERITAS observations of the BL Lac object B2 1215+30 between 2008 and 2012. During this period, the source was detected at very high energies (VHEs; E > 100 GeV) by VERITAS with a significance of 8.9σ and showed clear variability on timescales larger than months. In 2011, the source was found to be in a relatively bright state and a power-law fit to the differential photon spectrum yields a spectral index of 3.6 ± 0.4stat ± 0.3syst with an integral flux above 200 GeV of (8.0 ± 0.9stat ± 3.2syst) × 10–12 cm–2 s–1. No short term variability could be detected during the bright state in 2011. Multi-wavelength data were obtained contemporaneously with the VERITAS observations in 2011 and cover optical (Super-LOTIS, MDM, Swift/UVOT), X-ray (Swift/XRT), and gamma-ray (Fermi-LAT) frequencies. These were used to construct the spectral energy distribution (SED) of B2 1215+30. A one-zone leptonic model is used to model the blazar emission and the results are compared to those of MAGIC from early 2011 and other VERITAS-detected blazars. The SED can be reproduced well with model parameters typical for VHE-detected BL Lac objects.