We present the results of a five month monitoring campaign of the local
active galactic nuclei (AGN) 3C120. Observations with a median sampling of two
days were conducted with the robotic 15cm telescope VYSOS-6 located near Cerro
Armazones in Chile. Broad band (B,V) and narrow band (NB) filters were used in
order to measure fluxes of the AGN and the H_beta broad line region (BLR)
emission line. The NB flux is constituted by about 50% continuum and 50% H_beta
emission line. To disentangle line and continuum flux, a synthetic H_beta light
curve was created by subtracting a scaled V-band light curve from the NB light
curve. Here we show that the H_beta emission line responds to continuum
variations with a rest frame lag of 23.6 +/- 1.69 days. We estimate a virial
mass of the central black hole M_BH = 57 +/- 27 * 10^6 solar masses, by
combining the obtained lag with the velocity dispersion of a single
contemporaneous spectrum. Using the flux variation gradient (FVG) method, we
determined the host galaxy subtracted rest frame 5100A luminosity at the time
of our monitoring campaign with an uncertainty of 10% (L_AGN = 6.94 +/- 0.71*
10^43 ergs^-1). Compared with recent spectroscopic reverberation results, 3C120
shifts in the R_BLR - L_AGN diagram remarkably close to the theoretically
expected relation of R-L^0.5. Our results demonstrate the performance of
photometric AGN reverberation mapping, in particular for efficiently
determining the BLR size and the AGN luminosityComment: 11 pages, 11 figures, Published in Astronomy and Astrophysic