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Featured researches published by L. Fuhrmann.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2011

BLAZARS IN THE FERMI ERA: THE OVRO 40 m TELESCOPE MONITORING PROGRAM

J. L. Richards; W. Max-Moerbeck; Vasiliki Pavlidou; Oliver G. King; Timothy J. Pearson; Anthony C. S. Readhead; R. Reeves; M. C. Shepherd; Matthew A. Stevenson; Lawrence Weintraub; L. Fuhrmann; Enimanouil Angelakis; J. Anton Zensus; Stephen E. Healey; Roger W. Romani; M. S. Shaw; Keith Grainge; Mark Birkinshaw; Katy Lancaster; Diana M Worrall; G. B. Taylor; Garret Cotter; Ricardo Bustos

The Large Area Telescope (LAT) aboard the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope provides an unprecedented opportunity to study gamma-ray blazars. To capitalize on this opportunity, beginning in late 2007, about a year before the start of LAT science operations, we began a large-scale, fast-cadence 15 GHz radio monitoring program with the 40 m telescope at the Owens Valley Radio Observatory. This program began with the 1158 northern (δ > –20°) sources from the Candidate Gamma-ray Blazar Survey and now encompasses over 1500 sources, each observed twice per week with about 4 mJy (minimum) and 3% (typical) uncertainty. Here, we describe this monitoring program and our methods, and present radio light curves from the first two years (2008 and 2009). As a first application, we combine these data with a novel measure of light curve variability amplitude, the intrinsic modulation index, through a likelihood analysis to examine the variability properties of subpopulations of our sample. We demonstrate that, with high significance (6σ), gamma-ray-loud blazars detected by the LAT during its first 11 months of operation vary with almost a factor of two greater amplitude than do the gamma-ray-quiet blazars in our sample. We also find a significant (3σ) difference between variability amplitude in BL Lacertae objects and flat-spectrum radio quasars (FSRQs), with the former exhibiting larger variability amplitudes. Finally, low-redshift (z < 1) FSRQs are found to vary more strongly than high-redshift FSRQs, with 3σ significance. These findings represent an important step toward understanding why some blazars emit gamma-rays while others, with apparently similar properties, remain silent.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2003

Optical and radio behaviour of the BL Lacertae object 0716+714

C. M. Raiteri; Massimo Villata; G. Tosti; R. Nesci; E. Massaro; Margo F. Aller; Hugh D. Aller; H. Teräsranta; Omar M. Kurtanidze; M. G. Nikolashvili; M. A. Ibrahimov; I. E. Papadakis; T. P. Krichbaum; A. Kraus; A. Witzel; H. Ungerechts; U. Lisenfeld; U. Bach; G. Cimò; S. Ciprini; L. Fuhrmann; G. N. Kimeridze; L. Lanteri; M. Maesano; F. Montagni; G. Nucciarelli; Luisa Ostorero

Eight optical and four radio observatories have been intensively monitoring the BL Lac object 0716+714 in the last years: 4854 data points have been collected in the UBVRI bands since 1994, while radio light curves extend back to 1978. Many of these data, which all together constitute the widest optical and radio database available on this object, are presented here for the first time. Four major optical outbursts were observed at the beginning of 1995, in late 1997, at the end of 2000, and in fall 2001. In particular, an exceptional brightening of 2.3 mag in 9 days was detected in the R band just before the BeppoSAX pointing of October 30, 2000. A big radio outburst lasted from early 1998 to the end of 1999. The long-term trend shown by the optical light curves seems to vary with a characteristic time scale of about 3.3 years, while a longer period of 5.5–6 years seems to characterize the radio long-term variations. In general, optical colour indices are only weakly correlated with brightness; a clear spectral steepening trend was observed during at least one long-lasting dimming phase. Moreover, the optical spectrum became steeper after


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2012

Simultaneous Planck, Swift, and Fermi observations of X-ray and γ-ray selected blazars

P. Giommi; G. Polenta; A. Lähteenmäki; D. J. Thompson; Milvia Capalbi; S. Cutini; D. Gasparrini; J. González-Nuevo; J. León-Tavares; M. López-Caniego; M. N. Mazziotta; C. Monte; Matteo Perri; S. Rainò; G. Tosti; A. Tramacere; Francesco Verrecchia; Hugh D. Aller; M. F. Aller; E. Angelakis; D. Bastieri; A. Berdyugin; A. Bonaldi; L. Bonavera; C. Burigana; D. N. Burrows; S. Buson; E. Cavazzuti; Guido Chincarini; S. Colafrancesco

\rm JD \sim 2\,451\,000


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2008

Testing the inverse-Compton catastrophe scenario in the intra-day variable blazar S5 0716+71 III.Rapid and correlated flux density variability from radio to sub-mm bands

L. Fuhrmann; T. P. Krichbaum; A. Witzel; A. Kraus; S. Britzen; S. Bernhart; C. M. V. Impellizzeri; I. Agudo; J. Klare; Bong Won Sohn; E. Angelakis; U. Bach; K. E. Gabanyi; Elmar Körding; A. Pagels; J. A. Zensus; S. J. Wagner; Luisa Ostorero; H. Ungerechts; M. Grewing; M. Tornikoski; A. J. Apponi; B. Vila-Vilaró; L. M. Ziurys; Richard G. Strom

, the change occurring in the decaying phase of the late-1997 outburst. The radio flux behaviour at different frequencies is similar, but the flux variation amplitude decreases with increasing wavelength. The radio spectral index varies with brightness (harder when brighter), but the radio fluxes seem to be the sum of two different-spectrum contributions: a steady base level and a harder-spectrum variable component. Once the base level is removed, the radio variations appear as essentially achromatic, similarly to the optical behaviour. Flux variations at the higher radio frequencies lead the lower-frequency ones with week–month time scales. The behaviour of the optical and radio light curves is quite different, the broad radio outbursts not corresponding in time to the faster optical ones and the cross-correlation analysis indicating only weak correlation with long time lags. However, minor radio flux enhancements simultaneous with the major optical flares can be recognized, which may imply that the mechanism producing the strong flux increases in the optical band also marginally affects the radio one. On the contrary, the process responsible for the big radio outbursts does not seem to affect the optical emission.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2012

SBS 0846+513: a new γ-ray-emitting narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxy

F. D'Ammando; M. Orienti; J. Finke; C. M. Raiteri; E. Angelakis; L. Fuhrmann; M. Giroletti; T. Hovatta; W. Max-Moerbeck; J. S. Perkins; Anthony C. S. Readhead; J. L. Richards; D. Donato

We present simultaneous Planck, Swift, Fermi, and ground-based data for 105 blazars belonging to three samples with flux limits in the soft X-ray, hard X-ray, and -ray bands, and we compare our results to those of a companion paper presenting simultaneous Planck and multi-frequency observations of 104 radio-loud northern active galactic nuclei selected at radio frequencies. While we confirm several previous results, our unique data set has allowed us to demonstrate that the selection method strongly influences the results, producing biases that cannot be ignored. Almost all the BL Lac objects have been detected by Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT), whereas 30 to 40% of the flat-spectrum radio quasars (FSRQs) in the radio, soft X-ray, and hard X-ray selected samples are still below the -ray detection limit even after integrating 27 months of Fermi-LAT data. The radio to sub-millimetre spectral slope of blazars is quite flat, withh i 0 up to about 70 GHz, above which it steepens toh i 0:65. BL Lacs have significantly flatter spectra than FSRQs at higher frequencies. The distribution of the rest-frame synchrotron peak frequency ( S ) in the spectral energy distribution (SED) of FSRQs is the same in all the blazar samples withh S i = 10 13:1 0:1 Hz, while the mean inverse-Compton peak frequency,h IC i, ranges from 10 21 to 10 22 Hz. The distributions of S and of IC of BL Lacs are much broader and are shifted to higher energies than those of FSRQs; their shapes strongly depend on the selection method. The Compton dominance of blazars ranges from less than 0.2 to nearly 100, with only FSRQs reaching values larger than about 3. Its distribution is broad and depends strongly on the selection method, with -ray selected blazars peaking at 7 or more, and radio-selected blazars at values close to 1, thus implying that the common assumption that the blazar power budget is largely dominated by high-energy emission is a selection e ect. A comparison of our multi-frequency data with theoretical predictions shows that simple homogeneous SSC models cannot explain the simultaneous SEDs of most of the -ray detected blazars in all samples. The SED of the blazars that were not detected by Fermi-LAT may instead be consistent with SSC emission. Our data challenge the correlation between bolometric luminosity and S predicted by the blazar sequence.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2014

Detection of significant cm to sub-mm band radio and γ-ray correlated variability in Fermi bright blazars

L. Fuhrmann; S. Larsson; J. Chiang; E. Angelakis; J. A. Zensus; I. Nestoras; T. P. Krichbaum; H. Ungerechts; A. Sievers; Vasiliki Pavlidou; A. C. S. Readhead; W. Max-Moerbeck; T. J. Pearson

Aims. The BL Lac object S5 0716+71 was observed in a global multi-frequency campaign to search for rapid and correlated flux density variability and signatures of an inverse-Compton (IC) catastrophe during the states of extreme apparent brightness temperatures. Methods. The observing campaign involved simultaneous ground-based monitoring at radio to IR/optical wavelengths and was centered around a 500-ks pointing with the INTEGRAL satellite (November 10−17, 2003). Here, we present the combined analysis and results of the radio observations, covering the cm- to sub-mm bands. This facilitates a detailed study of the variability characteristics of an inter- to intra-day variable IDV source from cm- to the short mm-bands. We further aim to constrain the variability brightness temperatures (TB) and Doppler factors (δ) comparing the radio-bands with the hard X-ray emission, as seen by INTEGRAL at 3−200 keV. Results. 0716+714 was in an exceptionally high state and different (slower) phase of short-term variability, when compared to the past, most likely due to a pronounced outburst shortly before the campaign. The flux density variability in the cm- to mm-bands is dominated by a ∼ 4d ay time scale amplitude increase of up to ∼35%, systematically more pronounced towards shorter wavelengths. The cross-correlation analysis reveals systematic time-lags with the higher frequencies varying earlier, similar to canonical variability on longer time-scales. The increase of the variability amplitudes with frequency contradicts expectations from standard interstellar scintillation (ISS) and suggests a source-intrinsic origin for the observed inter-day variability. We find an inverted synchrotron spectrum peaking near 90 GHz, with the peak flux increasing during the first 4 days. The lower limits to TB derived from the inter-day variations exceed the 10 12 K IC-limit by up to 3−4 orders of magnitude. Assuming relativistic boosting, our different estimates of δ yield robust and self-consistent lower limits of δ ≥ 5−33 – in good agreement with δVLBI obtained from VLBI studies and the IC-Doppler factors δIC > 14−16 obtained from the INTEGRAL data. Conclusions. The non-detection of S5 0716+714 with INTEGRAL in this campaign excludes an excessively high X-ray flux associated with a simultaneous IC catastrophe. Since a strong contribution from ISS can be excluded, we conclude that relativistic Doppler boosting naturally explains the apparent violation of the theoretical limits. All derived Doppler factors are internally consistent, agree with the results from different observations and can be explained within the framework of standard synchrotron-self-Compton (SSC) jet models of AGN.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

TANAMI: tracking active galactic nuclei with austral milliarcsecond interferometry - I. First-epoch 8.4 GHz images

R. Ojha; M. Kadler; Moritz Bock; R. S. Booth; M. Dutka; Philip G. Edwards; Alan Lee Fey; L. Fuhrmann; Ralph A. Gaume; H. Hase; S. Horiuchi; David L. Jauncey; K. J. Johnston; U. Katz; M. L. Lister; Jim Lovell; C. Müller; C. Plötz; Jonathan F. H. Quick; E. Ros; G. B. Taylor; D. J. Thompson; S. J. Tingay; G. Tosti; A. K. Tzioumis; J. Wilms; J. A. Zensus

We report Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) observations of the radio-loud active galactic nucleus SBS 0846+513 (z = 0.5835), optically classified as a narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxy, together with new and archival radio-to-X-ray data. The source was not active at γ-ray energies during the first two years of Fermi operation. A significant increase in activity was observed during 2010 October–2011 August. In particular, a strong γ-ray flare was observed in 2011 June reaching an isotropic γ-ray luminosity (0.1–300 GeV) of 1.0 × 10^(48) erg s^(−1), comparable to that of the brightest flat spectrum radio quasars, and showing spectral evolution in γ rays. An apparent superluminal velocity of (8.2 ± 1.5)c in the jet was inferred from 2011 to 2012 Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) images, suggesting the presence of a highly relativistic jet. Both the power released by this object during the flaring activity and the apparent superluminal velocity are strong indications of the presence of a relativistic jet as powerful as those of blazars. In addition, variability and spectral properties in radio and γ-ray bands indicate blazar-like behaviour, suggesting that, except for some distinct optical characteristics, SBS 0846+513 could be considered as a young blazar at the low end of the blazars black hole mass distribution.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2007

The radio delay of the exceptional 3C 454.3 outburst. Follow-up WEBT observations in 2005-2006

M. Villata; C. M. Raiteri; M. F. Aller; U. Bach; M. A. Ibrahimov; Y. Y. Kovalev; Omar M. Kurtanidze; V. M. Larionov; C.-U. Lee; P. Leto; A. Lähteenmäki; Kim K. Nilsson; T. Pursimo; J. A. Ros; Naoko Sumitomo; A. E. Volvach; Hugh D. Aller; Akira Arai; C. S. Buemi; J. M. Coloma; V. T. Doroshenko; Yu. S. Efimov; L. Fuhrmann; V. A. Hagen-Thorn; M. Kamada; M. Katsuura; T. S. Konstantinova; E. N. Kopatskaya; D. Kotaka; Yu. A. Kovalev

The exact location of the γ-ray emitting region in blazars is still controversial. In order to attack this problem we present first results of a cross-correlation analysis between radio (11 cm to 0.8 mm wavelength, F-GAMMA programme) and γ-ray (0.1–300 GeV) ∼3.5 yr light curves of 54 Fermi-bright blazars. We perform a source stacking analysis and estimate significances and chance correlations using mixed source correlations. Our results reveal: (i) the first highly significant multiband radio and γ-ray correlations (radio lagging γ rays) when averaging over the whole sample, (ii) average time delays (source frame: 76 ± 23 to 7 ± 9 d), systematically decreasing from cm to mm/sub-mm bands with a frequency dependence τ_(r, γ)(ν) ∝ ν^(−1), in good agreement with jet opacity dominated by synchrotron self-absorption, (iii) a bulk γ-ray production region typically located within/upstream of the 3 mm core region (τ_(3mm, γ) = 12 ± 8 d), (iv) mean distances between the region of γ-ray peak emission and the radio ‘τ = 1 photosphere’ decreasing from 9.8 ± 3.0 pc (11 cm) to 0.9 ± 1.1 pc (2 mm) and 1.4 ± 0.8 pc (0.8 mm), (v) 3 mm/γ-ray correlations in nine individual sources at a significance level where one is expected by chance (probability: 4 × 10^(−6)), (vi) opacity and ‘time lag core shift’ estimates for quasar 3C 454.3 providing a lower limit for the distance of the bulk γ-ray production region from the supermassive black hole (SMBH) of ∼0.8–1.6 pc, i.e. at the outer edge of the broad-line region (BLR) or beyond. A 3 mm τ = 1 surface at ∼2–3 pc from the jet base (i.e. well outside the ‘canonical BLR’) finally suggests that BLR material extends to several parsec distances from the SMBH.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2003

Intraday variability in compact extragalactic radio sources - II. Observations with the Effelsberg 100 m radio telescope

A. Kraus; T. P. Krichbaum; R. Wegner; A. Witzel; G. Cimò; A. Quirrenbach; S. Britzen; L. Fuhrmann; A. P. Lobanov; C. E. Naundorf; K. Otterbein; Bo Peng; M. Risse; E. Ros; J. A. Zensus

We introduce the TANAMI program (Tracking Active Galactic Nuclei with Austral Milliarcsecond Interferometry) which is monitoring an initial sample of 43 extragalactic jets located south of -30 degrees declination at 8.4 GHz and 22 GHz since 2007. All aspects of the program are discussed. First epoch results at 8.4 GHz are presented along with physical parameters derived therefrom. We present first epoch images for 43 sources, some observed for the first time at milliarcsecond resolution. Parameters of these images as well as physical parameters derived from them are also presented and discussed. These and subsequent images from the TANAMI survey are available at this http URL We obtain reliable, high dynamic range images of the southern hemisphere AGN. All the quasars and BL Lac objects in the sample have a single-sided radio morphology. Galaxies are either double-sided, single-sided or irregular. About 28% of the TANAMI sample has been detected by LAT during its first three months of operations. Initial analysis suggests that when galaxies are excluded, sources detected by LAT have larger opening angles than those not detected by LAT. Brightness temperatures of LAT detections and non-detections seem to have similar distributions. The redshift distributions of the TANAMI sample and sub-samples are similar to those seen for the bright gamma-ray AGN seen by LAT and EGRET but none of the sources with a redshift above 1.8 have been detected by LAT.


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

Context. In spring 2005 the blazar 3C 454.3 was observed in an unprecedented bright state from the near-IR to the hard X-ray frequencies. A mm outburst peaked in June-July 2005, and it was followed by a flux increase at high radio frequencies. Aims. In this paper we report on multifrequency monitoring by the WEBT aimed at following the further evolution of the outburst in detail. In particular, we investigate the expected correlation and time delays between the optical and radio emissions in order to derive information on the variability mechanisms and jet structure. Methods. A comparison among the light curves at different frequencies is performed by means of visual inspection and discrete correlation function, and the results are interpreted with a simple model taking into account Doppler factor variations of geometric origin. Results. The high-frequency radio light curves show a huge outburst starting during the dimming phase of the optical one and lasting more than 1 year. The first phase is characterized by a slow flux increase, while in early 2006 a major flare is observed. The lower-frequency radio light curves show a progressively delayed and fainter event, which disappears below 8 GHz. We suggest that the radio major peak is not physically connected with the spring 2005 optical one, but it is actually correlated with a minor optical flare observed in October-November 2005. This interpretation | involves both an intrinsic and a geometric mechanism. The former is represented by disturbances travelling down the emitting jet, the latter being due to the curved-jet motion, with the consequent differential changes of viewing angles of the different emitting regions.

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Anthony C. S. Readhead

California Institute of Technology

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