First Detection of γ-Ray Emission from the Compact Symmetric Object JVAS J1311+1658
Abstract
We report the first detection of γ-ray emission from the young radio galaxy JVAS~J1311+1658, classified as a compact symmetric object (CSO). This detection is characterized by a recent GeV γ-ray flare identified in Fermi-LAT data during MJD~60032.6--60132.6, with a γ-ray source detected at a significance level of 6.2σ. The average 0.1--300~GeV flux is measured to be (1.6 0.6)×10-8\,ph\,cm-2\,s-1, with a photon spectral index of = 2.15 0.185. We find that a radiative model of the radio lobes significantly underestimates the observed γ-ray emission. The strong flux and short-term variability over 100 days suggest that the emission likely originates from newly launched sub-kiloparsec-scale jets at the core. This detection provides a unique window into the extreme environments and early-stage jet activity of young radio galaxies, offering insights into their initial evolution and the formation of relativistic jets in the earliest phases of galaxy growth.
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