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Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2006

The unprecedented optical outburst of the quasar 3C 454.3 : The WEBT campaign of 2004-2005

M. Villata; C. M. Raiteri; Thomas J. Balonek; Margo F. Aller; S. G. Jorstad; O. M. Kurtanidze; Fabrizio Nicastro; K. Nilsson; Hugh D. Aller; Akira Arai; A. A. Arkharov; U. Bach; E. Benítez; A. Berdyugin; C. S. Buemi; M. Böttcher; D. Carosati; R. Casas; A. Caulet; W. P. Chen; P. S. Chiang; Yi Chou; S. Ciprini; J. M. Coloma; G. Di Rico; C. Díaz; N. V. Efimova; C. Forsyth; A. Frasca; L. Fuhrmann

Context. The radio quasar 3C 454.3 underwent an exceptional optical outburst lasting more than 1 year and culminating in spring 2005. The maximum brightness detected was


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2008

Results of WEBT, VLBA and RXTE monitoring of 3C 279 during 2006-2007 ⋆

V. M. Larionov; S. G. Jorstad; Alan P. Marscher; Claudia Maria Raiteri; M. Villata; I. Agudo; M. F. Aller; A. A. Arkharov; I. M. Asfandiyarov; U. Bach; A. Berdyugin; C. S. Buemi; Alok C. Gupta; M. A. Gurwell; V. A. Hagen-Thorn; M. A. Ibrahimov; B. Jordan; M. Kamada; T. S. Konstantinova; E. N. Kopatskaya; Y. Y. Kovalev; Yu. A. Kovalev; Omar M. Kurtanidze; L. Lanteri; L. V. Larionova; P. Leto; E. Lindfors; E. Marilli; I. M. McHardy; M. G. Mingaliev

R=12.0


The Astrophysical Journal | 2007

The WEBT Campaign on the Blazar 3C 279 in 2006

M. Böttcher; S. Basu; M. Joshi; M. Villata; Akira Arai; N. Aryan; I. M. Asfandiyarov; U. Bach; A. Berduygin; M. Blaek; C. S. Buemi; A. J. Castro-Tirado; A. de Ugarte Postigo; A. Frasca; L. Fuhrmann; V. A. Hagen-Thorn; G. Henson; T. Hovatta; R. Hudec; M. A. Ibrahimov; Yuko Ishii; R. Z. Ivanidze; Martin Jelinek; M. Kamada; B. Z. Kapanadze; M. Katsuura; D. Kotaka; Y. Y. Kovalev; Yu. A. Kovalev; P. Kubánek

, which represents the most luminous quasar state thus far observed (


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2005

The WEBT campaign to observe AO 0235+16 in the 2003-2004 observing season. Results from radio-to-optical monitoring and XMM-Newton observations

C. M. Raiteri; M. Villata; M. A. Ibrahimov; V. M. Larionov; M. Kadler; Hugh D. Aller; Margo F. Aller; Y. Y. Kovalev; L. Lanteri; K. Nilsson; I. E. Papadakis; T. Pursimo; Gustavo E. Romero; H. Teräsranta; M. Tornikoski; A. A. Arkharov; David A. Barnaby; A. Berdyugin; M. Böttcher; K. Byckling; Michael T. Carini; D. Carosati; Sergio A. Cellone; S. Ciprini; J. A. Combi; S. Crapanzano; R. Crowe; A. Di Paola; M. Dolci; L. Fuhrmann

M_B \sim -31.4


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2008

The high activity of 3C 454.3 in autumn 2007. Monitoring by the WEBT during the AGILE detection

Claudia Maria Raiteri; M. Villata; W. P. Chen; W.-S. Hsiao; Omar M. Kurtanidze; K. Nilsson; V. M. Larionov; M. A. Gurwell; I. Agudo; Hugh D. Aller; M. F. Aller; E. Angelakis; A. A. Arkharov; U. Bach; M. Böttcher; C. S. Buemi; P. Calcidese; P. Charlot; Filippo D'Ammando; I. Donnarumma; E. Forné; A. Frasca; L. Fuhrmann; J. L. Gómez; V. A. Hagen-Thorn; S. G. Jorstad; G. N. Kimeridze; T. P. Krichbaum; A. Lähteenmäki; L. Lanteri

). Aims. In order to follow the emission behaviour of the source in detail, a large multiwavelength campaign was organized by the Whole Earth Blazar Telescope (WEBT). Methods. Continuous optical, near-IR and radio monitoring was performed in several bands. ToO pointings by the Chandra and INTEGRAL satellites provided additional information at high energies in May 2005. Results. The historical radio and optical light curves show different behaviours. Until about 2001.0 only moderate variability was present in the optical regime, while prominent and long-lasting radio outbursts were visible at the various radio frequencies, with higher-frequency variations preceding the lower-frequency ones. After that date, the optical activity increased and the radio flux is less variable. This suggests that the optical and radio emissions come from two separate and misaligned jet regions, with the inner optical one acquiring a smaller viewing angle during the 2004-2005 outburst. Moreover, the colour-index behaviour (generally redder-when-brighter) during the outburst suggests the presence of a luminous accretion disc. A huge mm outburst followed the optical one, peaking in June-July 2005. The high-frequency (37-43 GHz) radio flux started to increase in early 2005 and reached a maximum at the end of our observing period (end of September 2005). VLBA observations at 43 GHz during the summer confirm the brightening of the radio core and show an increasing polarization. An exceptionally bright X-ray state was detected in May 2005, corresponding to the rising mm flux and suggesting an inverse-Compton nature of the hard X-ray spectrum. Conclusions. A further multifrequency monitoring effort is needed to follow the next phases of this unprecedented event.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2006

Multifrequency variability of the blazar AO 0235+164.The WEBT campaign in 2004-2005 and long-term SED analysis

C. M. Raiteri; M. Villata; M. Kadler; M. A. Ibrahimov; Omar M. Kurtanidze; V. M. Larionov; M. Tornikoski; P. Boltwood; C.-U. Lee; Margo F. Aller; Gustavo E. Romero; Hugh D. Aller; Anabella T. Araudo; A. A. Arkharov; U. Bach; David A. Barnaby; A. Berdyugin; C. S. Buemi; Michael T. Carini; D. Carosati; Sergio A. Cellone; R. Cool; M. Dolci; N. V. Efimova; L. Fuhrmann; V. A. Hagen-Thorn; M. Holcomb; I. Ilyin; V. Impellizzeri; R. Z. Ivanidze

Context. The quasar 3C 279 is among the most extreme blazars in terms of luminosity and variability of flux at all wavebands. Its vari ations in flux and polarization are quite complex and therefore require intensive monitoring observations at multiple wavebands to characterise and interpret the observed changes. Aims. In this paper, we present radio-to-optical data taken by the WEBT, supplemented by our VLBA and RXTE observations, of 3C 279. Our goal is to use this extensive database to draw inferences regarding the physics of the relativistic jet. Methods. We assemble multifrequency light curves with data from 30 ground-based observatories and the space-based instruments SWIFT (UVOT) and RXTE, along with linear polarization vs. time in the optical R band. In addition, we present a sequence of 22 images (with polarization vectors) at 43 GHz at resolution 0.15 milliarcse c, obtained with the VLBA. We analyse the light curves and polarization, as well as the spectral energy distributions at different epochs, corresponding to different brightness states. Results. We find that the IR-optical-UV continuum spectrum of the vari able component corresponds to a power law with a constant slope of−1.6, while in the 2.4‐10 keV X-ray band it varies in slope from−1.1 to−1.6. The steepest X-ray spectrum occurs at a flux minimum. Durin g a decline in flux from maximum in late 2006, the optical and 43 GHz core po larization vectors rotate by∼ 300 ◦ . Conclusions. The continuum spectrum agrees with steady injection of relativistic electrons with a power-law energy distribution of slope−3.2 that is steepened to−4.2 at high energies by radiative losses. The X-ray emission at flux minimum comes most likely from a new component that starts in an upstream section of the jet where inverse Compton scattering of seed photons from outside the jet is important. The rotation of the polarization vector implies that the jet contains a helical magnetic field that extends ∼ 20 pc past the 43 GHz core.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2008

Radio-to-UV monitoring of AO 0235+164 by the WEBT and Swift during the 2006-2007 outburst

C. M. Raiteri; M. Villata; V. M. Larionov; M. F. Aller; U. Bach; M. A. Gurwell; Omar M. Kurtanidze; A. Lähteenmäki; K. Nilsson; A. Volvach; Hugh D. Aller; A. A. Arkharov; A. Berdyugin; M. Böttcher; C. S. Buemi; P. Calcidese; E. Cozzi; A. Di Paola; M. Dolci; Jun-Hui Fan; E. Forné; L. Foschini; Alok C. Gupta; V. A. Hagen-Thorn; L. Hooks; T. Hovatta; M. Joshi; M. Kadler; G. N. Kimeridze; T. S. Konstantinova

Thequasar3C279wasthetargetof anextensivemultiwavelengthmonitoringcampaignfrom2006Januarythrough April. An optical-IR-radio monitoring campaign by the Whole Earth Blazar Telescope (WEBT) collaboration was organized around target-of-opportunity X-ray and soft � -ray observations with Chandra and INTEGRAL in 2006 midJanuary, with additional X-ray coverage by RXTE and Swift XRT. In this paper we focus on the results of the WEBT campaign. Thesource exhibited substantial variability of opticalflux and spectralshape,witha characteristictimescale of a few days. The variability patterns throughout the optical BVRI bands were very closely correlated with each other, while there was no obvious correlation between the optical and radio variability. After the ToO trigger, the optical flux


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2009

WEBT multiwavelength monitoring and XMM-Newton observations of BL Lacertae in 2007-2008 Unveiling different emission components

Claudia Maria Raiteri; M. Villata; Alessandro Capetti; M. F. Aller; U. Bach; P. Calcidese; M. A. Gurwell; V. M. Larionov; J. Ohlert; K. Nilsson; A. Strigachev; I. Agudo; Hugh D. Aller; E. Benítez; A. Berdyugin; M. Böttcher; C. S. Buemi; S. Buttiglione; D. Carosati; P. Charlot; W. P. Chen; D. Dultzin; E. Forné; L. Fuhrmann; J. L. Gómez; A.C. Gupta; J. Heidt; D. Hiriart; W.-S. Hsiao; Martin Jelinek

A multiwavelength campaign to observe the BL Lac object AO 0235+16 (z = 0.94) was set up by the Whole Earth Blazar Telescope (WEBT) collaboration during the observing seasons 2003-2004 and 2004-2005, involving radio, near-IR and optical photometric monitoring, VLBA monitoring, optical spectral monitoring, and three pointings by the XMM-Newton satellite. Here we report on the results of the first season, which involved the participation of 24 optical and near-IR telescopes and 4 radio telescopes, as well as the first XMM-Newton pointing, which occurred on January 18-19, 2004. Unpublished data from previous epochs were also collected (from 5 optical-NIR and 3 radio telescopes), in order to fill the gap between the end of the period presented in Raiteri et al. (2001) and the start of the WEBT campaign. The contribution of the southern AGN, 2 arcsec distant from the source, is taken into account. It is found to especially affect the blue part of the optical spectrum when the source is faint. In the optical and near-IR the source has been very active in the last 3 years, although it has been rather faint most of the time, with noticeable variations of more than a magnitude over a few days. In contrast, in the radio bands it appears to have been quiescent since early 2000. The major radio (and optical) outburst predicted to peak around February-March 2004 (with a six month uncertainty) has not occurred yet. When comparing our results with the historical light curves, two different behaviours seem to characterize the optical outbursts: only the major events present a radio counterpart. The X-ray spectra obtained by the three EPIC detectors are well fitted by a power law with extra-absorption at z = 0.524; the energy index in the 0.2-10 keV range is well constrained: a = 0.645 ± 0.028 and the 1 keV flux density is 0.311 ± 0.008 μJy. The analysis of the X-ray light curves reveals that no significant variations occurred during the pointing. In contrast, simultaneous dense radio monitoring with the 100 m telescope at Effelsberg shows a ∼2-3% flux decrease in 6-7 h, which, if intrinsic, would imply a brightness temperature well above the Compton limit and hence a lower limit to the Doppler factor 6 > 46.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2005

Coordinated Multiwavelength Observation of 3C 66A during the WEBT Campaign of 2003-2004*

M. Böttcher; J. Harvey; M. Joshi; M. Villata; C. M. Raiteri; D. Bramel; R. Mukherjee; T. Savolainen; W. Cui; Giovanni Fossati; I. A. Smith; D. Able; Hugh D. Aller; Margo F. Aller; A. A. Arkharov; T. Augusteijn; Kiran S. Baliyan; David A. Barnaby; A. Berdyugin; E. Benítez; P. Boltwood; Michael T. Carini; D. Carosati; S. Ciprini; J. M. Coloma; S. Crapanzano; J. A. de Diego; A. Di Paola; M. Dolci; J.-H. Fan

The quasar-type blazar 3C 454.3 underwent a phase of high activity in summer and autumn 2007, which was intensively monitored in the radio-to-optical bands by the Whole Earth Blazar Telescope (WEBT). The gamma-ray satellite AGILE detected this source first in late July, and then in November-December 2007. In this letter we present the multifrequency data collected by the WEBT and collaborators during the second AGILE observing period, complemented by a few contemporaneous data from UVOT onboard the Swift satellite. The aim is to trace in detail the behaviour of the synchrotron emission from the blazar jet, and to investigate the contribution from the thermal emission component. Optical data from about twenty telescopes have been homogeneously calibrated and carefully assembled to construct an R-band light curve containing about 1340 data points in 42 days. This extremely well-sampled optical light curve allows us to follow the dramatic flux variability of the source in detail. In addition, we show radio-to-UV spectral energy distributions (SEDs) at different epochs, which represent different brightness levels. In the considered period, the source varied by 2.6 mag in a couple of weeks in the R band. Many episodes of fast (i.e. intranight) variability were observed, most notably on December 12, when a flux increase of about 1.1 mag in 1.5 hours was detected, followed by a steep decrease of about 1.2 mag in 1 hour. The contribution by the thermal component is difficult to assess, due to the uncertainties in the Galactic, and possibly also intrinsic, extinction in the UV band. However, polynomial fitting of radio-to-UV SEDs reveals an increasing spectral bending going towards fainter states, suggesting a UV excess likely due to the thermal emission from the accretion disc.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2012

Multiwavelength intraday variability of the BL Lacertae S5 0716+714

Alok C. Gupta; T. P. Krichbaum; Paul J. Wiita; Bindu Rani; Kirill V. Sokolovsky; P. Mohan; A. Mangalam; N. Marchili; L. Fuhrmann; I. Agudo; U. Bach; M. Böttcher; K. E. Gabanyi; Haritma Gaur; K. Hawkins; G. N. Kimeridze; Omar M. Kurtanidze; S. O. Kurtanidze; C.-U. Lee; Xiao-Lan Liu; B. McBreen; R. Nesci; G. Nestoras; M. G. Nikolashvili; J. Ohlert; N. Palma; S. Peneva; T. Pursimo; E. Semkov; A. Strigachev

Aims. A huge multiwavelength campaign targeting the blazar AO 0235+164 was organized by the Whole Earth Blazar Telescope (WEBT) in 2003-2005 to study the variability properties of the source. Methods. Monitoring observations were carried out at cm and mm wavelengths, and in the near-IR and optical bands, while three pointings by the XMM-Newton satellite provided information on the X-ray and UV emission. Results. We present the data acquired during the second observing season, 2004-2005, by 27 radio-to-optical telescopes. The ∼2600 data points collected allow us to trace the low-energy behaviour of the source in detail, revealing an increased near-IR and optical activity with respect to the previous season. Increased variability is also found at the higher radio frequencies, down to ∼15 GHz, but not at the lower ones. While the X-ray (and optical) light curves obtained during the XMM-Newton pointings reveal no significant short-term variability, the simultaneous intraday radio observations with the 100 m telescope at Effelsberg show flux-density changes at 10.5 GHz, which are more likely due to a combination of intrinsic and extrinsic processes. Conclusions. The radio (and optical) outburst predicted to peak around February-March 2004 on the basis of the previously observed 5-6 yr quasi-periodicity did not occur. The analysis of the optical light curves reveals now a longer characteristic time scale of variability of ∼8 yr, which is also present in the radio data. The spectral energy distributions corresponding to the XMM-Newton observations performed during the WEBT campaign are compared with those pertaining to previous pointings of X-ray satellites. Bright, soft X-ray spectra can be described in terms of an extra component, which appears also when the source is faint through a hard UV spectrum and a curvature of the X-ray spectrum. Finally, there might be a correlation between the X-ray and optical bright states with a long time delay of about 5 yr, which would require a geometrical interpretation.

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G. Maciejewski

Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń

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V. M. Larionov

Saint Petersburg State University

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