112 research outputs found
Locating the gamma-ray emission site in Fermi/LAT blazars from correlation analysis between 37 GHz radio and gamma-ray light curves
We address the highly debated issue of constraining the gamma-ray emission
region in blazars from cross-correlation analysis using discrete correlation
function between radio and gamma-ray light curves. The significance of the
correlations is evaluated using two different approaches: simulating light
curves and mixed source correlations. The cross-correlation analysis yielded 26
sources with significant correlations. In most of the sources, the gamma-ray
peaks lead the radio with time lags in the range +20 and +690 days, whereas in
sources 1633+382 and 3C 345 we find the radio emission to lead the gamma rays
by -15 and -40 days, respectively. Apart from the individual source study, we
stacked the correlations of all sources and also those based on sub-samples.
The time lag from the stacked correlation is +80 days for the whole sample and
the distance travelled by the emission region corresponds to 7 pc. We also
compared the start times of activity in radio and gamma rays of the correlated
flares using Bayesian block representation. This shows that most of the flares
at both wavebands start at almost the same time, implying a co-spatial origin
of the activity. The correlated sources show more flares and are brighter in
both bands than the uncorrelated ones.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures and 4 tables. Published in MNRAS. Online-only
Figure 6 is available as ancillary file with this submissio
Blazar sequence - an artefact of Doppler boosting
The blazar sequence is a scenario in which the bolometric luminosity of the
blazar governs the appearance of its spectral energy distribution. The most
prominent result is the significant negative correlation between the
synchrotron peak frequencies and the synchrotron peak luminosities of the
blazar population. Observational studies of the blazar sequence have, in
general, neglected the effect of Doppler boosting. We study the dependence of
both the synchrotron peak frequency and luminosity with Doppler-corrected
quantities. We determine the spectral energy distributions of 135 radio-bright
AGN and find the best-fit parabolic function for the distribution to quantify
their synchrotron emission. The corresponding measurements of synchrotron peak
luminosities and frequencies are Doppler-corrected with a new set of Doppler
factors calculated from variability data. The relevant correlations for the
blazar sequence are determined for these intrinsic quantities. The Doppler
factor depends strongly on the synchrotron peak frequency, the lower energy
sources being more boosted. Applying the Doppler correction to the peak
frequencies and luminosities annuls the negative correlation between the two
quantities, which becomes positive. For BL Lacertae objects, the positive
correlation is particularly strong. The blazar sequence, when defined as the
anticorrelation between the peak frequency and luminosity of the synchrotron
component of the spectral energy distribution, disappears when the intrinsic,
Doppler-corrected values are used. It is an observational phenomenon created by
variable Doppler boosting across the synchrotron peak frequency range.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures + 2 tables. The published version with minor
changes, the main conclusions are unchange
Simultaneous spectra and radio properties of BL Lac's
We present the results of nine years of the blazar observing programme at the
RATAN-600 radio telescope (2005-2014). The data were obtained at six frequency
bands (1.1, 2.3, 4.8, 7.7, 11.2, 21.7 GHz) for 290 blazars, mostly BL Lacs. In
addition, we used data at 37 GHz obtained quasi-simultaneously with the
Metsahovi radio observatory for some sources. The sample includes blazars of
three types: high-synchrotron peaked (HSP), low-synchrotron peaked (LSP), and
intermediate-synchrotron peaked (ISP). We present several epochs of flux
density measurements, simultaneous radio spectra, spectral indices and
properties of their variability. The analysis of the radio properties of
different classes of blazars showed that LSP and HSP BL Lac blazars are quite
different objects on average. LSPs have higher flux densities, flatter spectra
and their variability increases as higher frequencies are considered. On the
other hand, HSPs are very faint in radio domain, tend to have steep low
frequency spectra, and they are less variable than LSPs at all frequencies.
Another result is spectral flattening above 7.7 GHz detected in HSPs, while an
average LSP spectrum typically remains flat at both the low and high frequency
ranges we considered.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomische
Nachrichte
RATAN-600 multi-frequency data for the BL Lacertae objects
We present a new catalogue of the RATAN-600 multi-frequency measurements for BL Lac objects. The purpose of this catalogue is to compile the BL Lac multi-frequency data that is acquired with the RATAN-600 simultaneously at several frequencies. The BL Lac objects emit a strongly variable and polarized non-thermal radiation across the entire electromagnetic spectrum from radio to gamma rays and represent about 1% of known AGNs. They belong to the blazar population and differ from other blazars' featureless optical spectrum, which sometimes have absorption lines, or have weak and narrow emission lines. One of the most effective ways of studying the physics of BL Lacs is the use of simultaneous multi-frequency data.
The multi-frequency broadband radio spectrum was obtained simultaneously with an accuracy of up to 1-2 min for four to six frequencies: 1.1, 2.3, 4.8, 7.7, 11.2, and 21.7 GHz. The catalogue is based on the RATAN-600 observations and on the data from: equatorial coordinate and redshift, R-band magnitude, synchrotron peak frequency, SED classes, and object type literature.
The present version of the catalogue contains RATAN-600 flux densities measurements over nine years (2006-2014), radio spectra at different epochs, and their parameters of the catalogue for more than 300 BL Lacs objects and candidates. The BL Lacs list is constantly updated with new observational data of RATAN-600.</p
Locating the Îł-ray emission site inFermi/LAT blazars from correlation analysis between 37 GHz radio and Îł-ray light curves
We address the highly debated issue of constraining the Îł-ray emission region in blazars from cross-correlation analysis using discrete correlation function between radio and Îł-ray light curves. The significance of the correlations is evaluated using two different approaches: simulating light curves and mixed source correlations. The cross-correlation analysis yielded 26 sources with significant correlations. In most of the sources, the Îł-ray peaks lead the radio with time lags in the range +20 and +690 d, whereas in sources 1633+382 and 3C 345 we find the radio emission to lead the Îł-rays by â15 and â40 d, respectively. Apart from the individual source study, we stacked the correlations of all sources and also those based on subsamples. The time lag from the stacked correlation is +80 d for the whole sample and the distance travelled by the emission region corresponds to 7 pc. We also compared the start times of activity in radio and Îł-rays of the correlated flares using Bayesian block representation. This shows that most of the flares at both wavebands start at almost the same time, implying a co-spatial origin of the activity. The correlated sources show more flares and are brighter in both bands than the uncorrelated ones
Correlation between Fermi/LAT gamma-ray and 37 GHz radio properties of northern AGN averaged over 11 months
Although the Fermi mission has increased our knowledge of gamma-ray AGN, many
questions remain, such as the site of gamma-ray production, the emission
mechanism, and the factors that govern the strength of the emission. Using data
from a high radio band, 37 GHz, uncontaminated by other radiation components
besides the jet emission, we study these questions with averaged flux densities
over the the first year of Fermi operations. We look for possible correlations
between the 100 MeV - 100 GeV band used by the Fermi satellite and 37 GHz radio
band observed at the Aalto University Metsahovi Radio Telescope, as well as for
differences between the gamma-ray emission of different AGN subsamples. We use
data averaged over the 1FGL period. Our sample includes 249 northern AGN,
including a complete sample of 68 northern AGN with a measured average flux
density exceeding 1 Jy. We find significant correlation between both the flux
densities and luminosities in gamma and radio bands. The Fermi luminosity is
inversely correlated with the peak frequency of the synchrotron component of
the AGN spectral energy distributions. We also calculate the gamma dominances,
defined as the ratio between the gamma and radio flux densities, and find an
indication that high-energy blazars are more gamma-dominated than low-energy
blazars. After studying the distributions of gamma and radio luminosities, it
is clear that BL Lacertae objects are different from quasars, with
significantly lower luminosities. It is unclear whether this is an intrinsic
difference, an effect of variable relativistic boosting across the synchrotron
peak frequency range, or the result of Fermi being more sensitive to hard
spectrum sources like BL Lacertae objects. Our results suggest that the gamma
radiation is produced co-spatially with the 37 GHz emission, i.e., in the jet.Comment: 8+5 pages, 9 figures and 2 tables. To be published in A&
Spectral energy distributions of a large sample of BL Lacertae objects
We have collected a large amount of multifrequency data for the objects in
the Metsahovi Radio Observatory BL Lacertae sample and computed their spectral
energy distributions (SED). This is the first time the SEDs of BL Lacs have
been studied with a sample of over 300 objects. The synchrotron components of
the SEDs were fitted with a parabolic function to determine the synchrotron
peak frequency. We checked the dependence between luminosities at several
frequency bands and synchrotron peak frequency to test the blazar sequence
scenario, which states that the source luminosity depends on the location of
the synchrotron peak. We also calculated broad band spectral indices and
plotted them against each other and the peak frequency. The range of peak
frequencies in our study was considerably extended compared to previous
studies. There were 22 objects for which log\nu_{peak}>19. The data shows that
at 5 GHz, 37 GHz and 5500 A there is negative correlation between luminosity
and nu_{peak}. There is no significant correlation between source luminosity at
synchrotron peak and peak frequency. Several low radio luminosity-low energy
peaked BL Lacs were found. The negative correlation between broad band spectral
indices and nu_{peak} is also significant, although there is substantial
scatter. Therefore we find that neither alpha_{rx} nor alpha_{ro} can be used
to determine the synchrotron peak of BL Lacs. On the grounds of our results we
conclude that the blazar sequence scenario is not valid. In all our results the
BL Lac population is continuous with no hint of the bimodality of the first BL
Lac samples.Comment: 10 + 27 pages, 13 figures, accepted to A&
Multifrequency Observations of the Gamma-Ray Blazar 3C 279 in Low-State during Integral AO-1
We report first results of a multifrequency campaign from radio to hard X-ray
energies of the prominent gamma-ray blazar 3C 279 during the first year of the
INTEGRAL mission. The variable blazar was found at a low activity level, but
was detected by all participating instruments. Subsequently a multifrequency
spectrum could be compiled. The individual measurements as well as the compiled
multifrequency spectrum are presented. In addition, this 2003 broadband
spectrum is compared to one measured in 1999 during a high activity period of
3C 279.Comment: 4 pages including 6 figures, to appear in: 'Proc. of the 5th INTEGRAL
Workshop', ESA SP-552, in pres
37 GHz observations of a large sample of BL Lacertae objects
We present 37 GHz data obtained at Metsahovi Radio Observatory in 2001
December - 2005 April for a large sample of BL Lacertae objects. We also report
the mean variability indices and radio spectral indices in frequency intervals
5 - 37 GHz and 37 - 90 GHz. Approximately 34 % of the sample was detected at 37
GHz, 136 BL Lacertae objects in all. A large majority of the detected sources
were low-energy BL Lacs (LBLs). The variability index values of the sample were
diverse, the mean fractional variability of the sample being \Delta S_2 = 0.31.
The spectral indices also varied widely, but the average radio spectrum of the
sample sources is flat. Our observations show that many of the high-energy BL
Lacs (HBL), which are usually considered radio-quiet, can at times be detected
at 37 GHz.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures + 5 tables. Published in Astronomical Journa
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