III Zw 2 is a spiral galaxy with an optical spectrum and faint extended radio
structure typical of a Seyfert galaxy, but also with an extremely variable,
blazar-like radio core. We have now discovered a new radio flare where the
source has brightened more than twenty-fold within less than two years. A
broad-band radio spectrum between 1.4 and 666 GHz shows a textbook-like
synchrotron spectrum peaking at 43 GHz, with a self-absorbed synchrotron
spectral index +2.5 at frequencies below 43 GHz and an optically thin spectral
index -0.75 at frequencies above 43 GHz. The outburst spectrum can be well
fitted by two homogenous, spherical components with equipartition sizes of 0.1
and 0.2 pc at 43 and 15 GHz, and with magnetic fields of 0.4 and 1 Gauss. VLBA
observations at 43 GHz confirm this double structure and these sizes. Time
scale arguments suggest that the emitting regions are shocks which are
continuously accelerating particles. This could be explained by a frustrated
jet scenario with very compact hotspots. Similar millimeter-peaked spectrum
(MPS) sources could have escaped our attention because of their low flux
density at typical survey frequencies and their strong variability.Comment: ApJ Letters, in press, (AAS)LaTeX, 3 figures, available at
http://www2.mpifr-bonn.mpg.de/staff/hfalcke/publications.html#iiizw2 or in a
few weeks at
http://www.mpifr-bonn.mpg.de/staff/falcke/publications.html#iiizw