Chemically peculiar stars of the upper part of the main sequence show
periodical variability in line intensities and continua, modulated by the
stellar rotation, which is attributed to the existence of chemical spots on the
surface of these stars. The flux variability is caused by the changing
redistribution rate of the radiative flux predominantly from the
short-wavelength part of the spectra to the long-wavelength part, which is a
result of abundance anomalies. We study the nature of the multi-spectral
variability of one of the brightest chemically peculiar stars, θ Aur. We
predict the flux variability of θ Aur from the emerging intensities
calculated for individual surface elements of the star taking into account
horizontal variation of chemical composition derived from Doppler abundance
maps. The simulated optical variability in the Str\"omgren photometric system
and the ultraviolet flux variability agree well with observations. The IUE flux
distribution is reproduced in great detail by our models. The resonance lines
of magnesium and possibly also some lines of silicon are relatively weak in the
ultraviolet domain, which indicates non-negligible vertical abundance gradients
in the atmosphere. We also derive a new period of the star, P=3.618664(10)
d, from all available photometric and magnetic measurements and show that the
observed rotational period is constant over decades. The ultraviolet and visual
variability of θ Aur is mostly caused by silicon bound-free absorption
and chromium and iron line absorption. These elements redistribute the flux
mainly from the far-ultraviolet region to the near-ultraviolet and optical
regions in the surface abundance spots. The light variability is modulated by
the stellar rotation. The ultraviolet domain is key for understanding the
properties of chemically peculiar stars. (abridged)Comment: 12 pages, accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic