G. V. Panopoulou
University of Crete
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Featured researches published by G. V. Panopoulou.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015
D. Blinov; V. Pavlidou; I. Papadakis; S. Kiehlmann; G. V. Panopoulou; I. Liodakis; O. G. King; E. Angelakis; M. Baloković; H. K. Das; R. Feiler; L. Fuhrmann; T. Hovatta; P. Khodade; A. Kus; N. Kylafis; Ashish A. Mahabal; I. Myserlis; D. Modi; B. Pazderska; E. Pazderski; I. Papamastorakis; T. J. Pearson; C. Rajarshi; A. N. Ramaprakash; P. Reig; Anthony C. S. Readhead; K. Tassis; J. A. Zensus
We present first results on polarization swings in optical emission of blazars obtained by RoboPol, a monitoring programme of an unbiased sample of gamma-ray bright blazars specially designed for effective detection of such events. A possible connection of polarization swing events with periods of high activity in gamma-rays is investigated using the data set obtained during the first season of operation. It was found that the brightest gamma-ray flares tend to be located closer in time to rotation events, which may be an indication of two separate mechanisms responsible for the rotations. Blazars with detected rotations during non-rotating periods have significantly larger amplitude and faster variations of polarization angle than blazars without rotations. Our simulations show that the full set of observed rotations is not a likely outcome (probability ≤1.5 × 10^(−2)) of a random walk of the polarization vector simulated by a multicell model. Furthermore, it is highly unlikely (∼5 × 10^(−5)) that none of our rotations is physically connected with an increase in gamma-ray activity.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016
D. Blinov; Vasiliki Pavlidou; I. E. Papadakis; T. Hovatta; T. J. Pearson; I. Liodakis; G. V. Panopoulou; E. Angelakis; M. Baloković; H. K. Das; P. Khodade; S. Kiehlmann; O. G. King; A. J. Kus; Nikolaos D. Kylafis; Ashish A. Mahabal; A. Marecki; D. Modi; I. Myserlis; E. Paleologou; I. Papamastorakis; B. M. Pazderska; Eugeniusz Pazderski; Chaitanya V. Rajarshi; A. N. Ramaprakash; A. C. S. Readhead; P. Reig; K. Tassis; J. A. Zensus
We present measurements of rotations of the optical polarization of blazars during the second year of operation of RoboPol, a monitoring programme of an unbiased sample of gamma-ray bright blazars specially designed for effective detection of such events, and we analyse the large set of rotation events discovered in two years of observation. We investigate patterns of variability in the polarization parameters and total flux density during the rotation events and compare them to the behaviour in a non-rotating state. We have searched for possible correlations between average parameters of the polarization-plane rotations and average parameters of polarization, with the following results: (1) there is no statistical association of the rotations with contemporaneous optical flares; (2) the average fractional polarization during the rotations tends to be lower than that in a non-rotating state; (3) the average fractional polarization during rotations is correlated with the rotation rate of the polarization plane in the jet rest frame; (4) it is likely that distributions of amplitudes and durations of the rotations have physical upper bounds, so arbitrarily long rotations are not realized in nature.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2014
O. G. King; D. Blinov; A. N. Ramaprakash; I. Myserlis; E. Angelakis; M. Baloković; R. Feiler; L. Fuhrmann; T. Hovatta; P. Khodade; A. Kougentakis; N. Kylafis; A. Kus; D. Modi; E. Paleologou; G. V. Panopoulou; I. Papadakis; I. Papamastorakis; G. Paterakis; V. Pavlidou; B. Pazderska; E. Pazderski; T. J. Pearson; C. Rajarshi; Anthony C. S. Readhead; P. Reig; A. Steiakaki; K. Tassis; J. A. Zensus
We describe the data reduction pipeline and control system for the RoboPol project. The RoboPol project is monitoring the optical R-band magnitude and linear polarization of a large sample of active galactic nuclei that is dominated by blazars. The pipeline calibrates and reduces each exposure frame, producing a measurement of the magnitude and linear polarization of every source in the 13 arcmin × 13 arcmin field of view. The control system combines a dynamic scheduler, real-time data reduction, and telescope automation to allow high-efficiency unassisted observations.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2014
V. Pavlidou; E. Angelakis; I. Myserlis; D. Blinov; O. G. King; I. Papadakis; K. Tassis; T. Hovatta; B. Pazderska; E. Paleologou; M. Baloković; R. Feiler; L. Fuhrmann; P. Khodade; A. Kus; N. Kylafis; D. Modi; G. V. Panopoulou; I. Papamastorakis; E. Pazderski; T. J. Pearson; C. Rajarshi; A. N. Ramaprakash; Anthony C. S. Readhead; P. Reig; J. A. Zensus
We present first results from RoboPol, a novel-design optical polarimeter operating at the Skinakas Observatory in Crete. The data, taken during the 2013 May–June commissioning of the instrument, constitute a single-epoch linear polarization survey of a sample of gamma-ray-loud blazars, defined according to unbiased and objective selection criteria, easily reproducible in simulations, as well as a comparison sample of, otherwise similar, gamma-ray-quiet blazars. As such, the results of this survey are appropriate for both phenomenological population studies and for tests of theoretical population models. We have measured polarization fractions as low as 0.015 down to R-mag of 17 and as low as 0.035 down to 18 mag. The hypothesis that the polarization fractions of gamma-ray-loud and gamma-ray-quiet blazars are drawn from the same distribution is rejected at the 3σ level. We therefore conclude that gamma-ray-loud and gamma-ray-quiet sources have different optical polarization properties. This is the first time this statistical difference is demonstrated in optical wavelengths. The polarization fraction distributions of both samples are well described by exponential distributions with averages of ⟨p⟩=6.4^(+0.9)_(−0.8)×10^(−2) for gamma-ray-loud blazars, and ⟨p⟩=3.2^(+2.0)_(−1.1)×10^(−2) for gamma-ray-quiet blazars. The most probable value for the difference of the means is 3.4^(+1.5)_(−2.0)×10^(−2). The distribution of polarization angles is statistically consistent with being uniform.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016
E. Angelakis; T. Hovatta; D. Blinov; Vasiliki Pavlidou; S. Kiehlmann; I. Myserlis; M. Böttcher; P. Mao; G. V. Panopoulou; I. Liodakis; O. G. King; M. Baloković; A. J. Kus; Nikolaos D. Kylafis; Ashish A. Mahabal; A. Marecki; E. Paleologou; I. E. Papadakis; I. Papamastorakis; E. Pazderski; T. J. Pearson; S. Prabhudesai; A. N. Ramaprakash; A. C. S. Readhead; P. Reig; K. Tassis; Meg Urry; J. A. Zensus
We present average R-band optopolarimetric data, as well as variability parameters, from the first and second RoboPol observing season. We investigate whether gamma- ray--loud and gamma-ray--quiet blazars exhibit systematic differences in their optical polarization properties. We find that gamma-ray--loud blazars have a systematically higher polarization fraction (0.092) than gamma-ray--quiet blazars (0.031), with the hypothesis of the two samples being drawn from the same distribution of polarization fractions being rejected at the 3{\sigma} level. We have not found any evidence that this discrepancy is related to differences in the redshift distribution, rest-frame R-band lu- minosity density, or the source classification. The median polarization fraction versus synchrotron-peak-frequency plot shows an envelope implying that high synchrotron- peaked sources have a smaller range of median polarization fractions concentrated around lower values. Our gamma-ray--quiet sources show similar median polarization fractions although they are all low synchrotron-peaked. We also find that the random- ness of the polarization angle depends on the synchrotron peak frequency. For high synchrotron-peaked sources it tends to concentrate around preferred directions while for low synchrotron-peaked sources it is more variable and less likely to have a pre- ferred direction. We propose a scenario which mediates efficient particle acceleration in shocks and increases the helical B-field component immediately downstream of the shock.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016
D. Blinov; V. Pavlidou; I. Papadakis; S. Kiehlmann; I. Liodakis; G. V. Panopoulou; T. J. Pearson; E. Angelakis; M. Baloković; T. Hovatta; V. Joshi; O. G. King; A. Kus; N. Kylafis; Ashish A. Mahabal; A. Marecki; I. Myserlis; E. Paleologou; I. Papamastorakis; E. Pazderski; S. Prabhudesai; A. N. Ramaprakash; Anthony C. S. Readhead; P. Reig; K. Tassis; J. A. Zensus
We present a new set of optical polarization plane rotations in blazars, observed during the third year of operation of RoboPol. The entire set of rotation events discovered during three years of observations is analysed with the aim of determining whether these events are inherent in all blazars. It is found that the frequency of the polarization plane rotations varies widely among blazars. This variation cannot be explained either by a difference in the relativistic boosting or by selection effects caused by a difference in the average fractional polarization. We conclude that the rotations are characteristic of a subset of blazars and that they occur as a consequence of their intrinsic properties.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016
G. V. Panopoulou; I. Psaradaki; K. Tassis
In diffuse molecular clouds, possible precursors of star-forming clouds, the effect of the magnetic field is unclear. In this work we compare the orientations of filamentary structures in the Polaris Flare, as seen through dust emission by Herschel, to the plane-of-the-sky magnetic field orientation (
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015
G. V. Panopoulou; K. Tassis; D. Blinov; V. Pavlidou; O. G. King; E. Paleologou; A. N. Ramaprakash; E. Angelakis; M. Baloković; H. K. Das; R. Feiler; T. Hovatta; P. Khodade; S. Kiehlmann; A. Kus; N. Kylafis; I. Liodakis; Ashish A. Mahabal; D. Modi; I. Myserlis; I. Papadakis; I. Papamastorakis; B. Pazderska; E. Pazderski; T. J. Pearson; C. Rajarshi; Anthony C. S. Readhead; P. Reig; J. A. Zensus
\rm B_{pos}
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2014
O. G. King; D. Blinov; Dimitrios Giannios; I. Papadakis; E. Angelakis; M. Baloković; L. Fuhrmann; T. Hovatta; P. Khodade; S. Kiehlmann; N. Kylafis; A. Kus; I. Myserlis; D. Modi; G. V. Panopoulou; I. Papamastorakis; V. Pavlidou; B. Pazderska; E. Pazderski; T. J. Pearson; C. Rajarshi; A. N. Ramaprakash; Anthony C. S. Readhead; P. Reig; K. Tassis; J. A. Zensus
) as revealed by stellar optical polarimetry with RoboPol. Dust structures in this translucent cloud show a strong preference for alignment with
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016
T. Hovatta; E. Lindfors; D. Blinov; V. Pavlidou; K. Nilsson; S. Kiehlmann; E. Angelakis; V. Fallah Ramazani; I. Liodakis; I. Myserlis; G. V. Panopoulou; T. Pursimo
\rm B_{pos}