17 results on '"C. Bailyn"'
Search Results
2. A persistent ultraviolet outflow from an accreting neutron star binary transient
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N. Castro Segura, C. Knigge, K. S. Long, D. Altamirano, M. Armas Padilla, C. Bailyn, D. A. H. Buckley, D. J. K. Buisson, J. Casares, P. Charles, J. A. Combi, V. A. Cúneo, N. D. Degenaar, S. del Palacio, M. Díaz Trigo, R. Fender, P. Gandhi, M. Georganti, C. Gutiérrez, J. V. Hernandez Santisteban, F. Jiménez-Ibarra, J. Matthews, M. Méndez, M. Middleton, T. Muñoz-Darias, M. Özbey Arabacı, M. Pahari, L. Rhodes, T. D. Russell, S. Scaringi, J. van den Eijnden, G. Vasilopoulos, F. M. Vincentelli, P. Wiseman, Science & Technology Facilities Council, University of St Andrews. School of Physics and Astronomy, High Energy Astrophys. & Astropart. Phys (API, FNWI), API Other Research (FNWI), and Astronomy
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High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena (astro-ph.HE) ,Multidisciplinary ,Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,FOS: Physical sciences ,3rd-DAS ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,AC ,QC Physics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,QB Astronomy ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Solar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR) ,QC ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics ,QB - Abstract
All disc-accreting astrophysical objects produce powerful outflows. In binaries containing neutron stars (NS) or black holes, accretion often takes place during violent outbursts. The main disc wind signatures during these eruptions are blue-shifted X-ray absorption lines, which are preferentially seen in disc-dominated "soft states". By contrast,optical wind-formed lines have recently been detected in "hard states", when a hot corona dominates the luminosity. The relationship between these signatures is unknown, and no erupting system has revealed wind-formed lines between the X-ray and optical bands yet, despite the many strong resonance transitions in this ultraviolet (UV) region. Here, we show that the transient NS binary Swift J1858.6-0814 exhibits wind-formed, blue-shifted absorption associated with C IV, N V and He II in time-resolved UV spectroscopy during a luminous hard state. This represents the first evidence for a warm, moderately ionized outflow component in this state. Simultaneously observed optical lines also display transient blue-shifted absorption. Decomposing the UV data into constant and variable components, the blue-shifted absorption is associated with the former. This implies that the outflow is not connect to the luminous flares in the data. The joint presence of UV and optical wind features reveals a multi-phase and/or stratified outflow from the outer disc. This type of persistent mass loss across all accretion states has been predicted by radiation-hydrodynamic simulations and helps to explain the shorter-than-expected outbursts duration., Comment: Published in Nature. Submitted: 9 July 2021
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- 2022
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3. Optical and Infrared Photometry of the Microquasar GRO J1655−40 in Quiescence
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Jerome A. Orosz, Jenny Greene, and C. Bailyn
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Physics ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Infrared ,Astrophysics (astro-ph) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Quasar ,Astrophysics ,Mass ratio ,Light curve ,Orbital period ,01 natural sciences ,Photometry (optics) ,13. Climate action ,Space and Planetary Science ,Limb darkening ,0103 physical sciences ,010303 astronomy & astrophysics ,Confidence region - Abstract
We present BVIJK photometry of the black-hole candidate GRO J1655-40 in full quiescence. We report a refined orbital period of 2.62191 +/- 0.00020 days. The light curves are dominated by ellipsoidal variations from the secondary star. We model the light curves with an upgraded code which includes a more accurate treatment of limb darkening. Previous models containing a large cool disk are ruled out, and indeed our data can be fit with a pure ellipsoidal light curve without any disk contribution. In general agreement with previous results, we derive a confidence region of the correlated quantities of inclination and mass ratio, centered on an inclination of 70.2 +/ 1.9 degrees, and mass ratio 2.6 +/- 0.3, resulting in a primary mass M = 6.3 +/- 0.5 Mo (all 95% confidence). The complex limits and errors on these values, and on the possible disk contribution to the light curve, are discussed., Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures. To be published in The Astrophysical Journal
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- 2001
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4. Discovery of the Bright Trans-Neptunian Object 2000 EB[TINF]173[/TINF]
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Samir Salim, Gu. Sánchez, J. Stock, B. E. Schaefer, Augustus Oemler, Nancy Ellman, S. Pravdo, B. Vicente, C. Abad, Eleanor F. Helin, Darren L. DePoy, C. Secco, G. Magris, A. Katherina Vivas, H. Honeycutt, W. Emmet, D. Rabinowitz, P. Andrews, J. Mateu, Ignacio Ferrin, Sabatino Sofia, Ming Deng, Gianfranco Spavieri, S. L. Mufson, C. Baltay, A. Rengstorf, A. Bongiovanni, F. Fuenmayor, C. Bailyn, Cesar Briceno, F. Della Prugna, Jesús Hernández, P. Rosenzweig, J. Musser, M. Gebhard, Gustavo Bruzual, David Herrera, C. N. Sabbey, H. Schenner, R. Pacheco, K. Vieira, W. F. van Altena, O. Naranjo, J. A. Snyder, Kenneth J. Lawrence, Jae Il Shin, Ge. Sánchez, and Paolo De Coppi
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Physics ,Space and Planetary Science ,Observatory ,Sky ,Error bar ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Magnitude (astronomy) ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Trans-Neptunian object ,Astrophysics ,Schmidt camera ,media_common - Abstract
We describe the discovery circumstances and photometric properties of 2000 EB173, now one of the brightest trans-Neptunian objects (TNOs) with opposition magnitude m_R=18.9 and also one of the largest Plutinos, found with the drift-scanning camera of the QUEST Collaboration, attached to the 1-m Schmidt telescope of the National Observatory of Venezuela. We measure B-V = 0.99 +/- 0.14 and V-R = 0.57 +/- 0.05, a red color observed for many fainter TNOs. At our magnitude limit m_R = 20.1 +/- 0.20, our single detection reveals a sky density of 0.015 (+0.034, -0.012) TNOs per deg^2 (the error bars are 68% confidence limits), consistent with fainter surveys showing a cumulative number proportional to 10^0.5m_R. Assuming an inclination distribution of TNOs with FWHM exceeding 30 deg, it is likely that one hundred to several hundred objects brighter than m_R=20.1 remain to be discovered.
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- 2001
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5. A Large Area CCD Camera for the Schmidt Telescope at the Venezuelan National Astronomical Observatory
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C. Baltay, J. A. Snyder, P. Andrews, W. Emmet, B. Schaefer, J. Sinnott, C. Bailyn, P. Coppi, A. Oemler, C. N. Sabbey, S. Sofia, W. van Altena, A. K. Vivas, C. Abad, A. Bongiovanni, C. Briceño, G. Bruzual, F. Della Prugna, G. Magris, Ge. Sánchez, Gu. Sánchez, H. Schenner, J. Stock, B. Adams, M. Gebhard, R. K. Honeycutt, J. Musser, A. Rengstorff, I. Ferrin, F. Fuenmayor, J. Hernandez, O. Naranjo, P. Rosenzweig, F. Harris, and J. Geary
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Physics ,Ccd camera ,Pixel ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Astrophysics (astro-ph) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics ,Schmidt camera ,Image plane ,Photometry (optics) ,Optics ,Space and Planetary Science ,Observatory ,Sky ,business ,media_common - Abstract
We have designed, constructed and put into operation a large area CCD camera that covers a large fraction of the image plane of the 1 meter Schmidt telescope at Llano del Hato in Venezuela. The camera consists of 16 CCD devices arranged in a 4 x 4 mosaic covering 2.3 degrees x 3.5 degrees of sky. The CCDs are 2048 x 2048 LORAL devices with 15 micron pixels. The camera is optimized for drift scan photometry and objective prism spectroscopy. The design considerations, construction features and performance parameters are described in the following article., 34 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in PASP
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- 2002
6. Optical Observations of the Black Hole Candidate XTE J1550-564 During Re-Flare and Quiescence
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Ronald A. Remillard, Jeffrey E. McClintock, Jerome A. Orosz, C. Bailyn, Gregory J. Sobczak, and Raj K. Jain
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Physics ,Brightness ,Astrophysics (astro-ph) ,Flux ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics ,Orbital period ,Light curve ,Corona ,law.invention ,Space and Planetary Science ,law ,Magnitude (astronomy) ,Flare - Abstract
We report optical monitoring of the soft X-ray transient XTE J1550-564 during the 1999 season (4 January 1999 to 24 August 1999). The first optical observations available in 1999 show that the peak ``re-flare'' brightness had exceeded the peak brightness of the initial optical flare in September 1998 by over half a magnitude. We compare the optical re-flare light curves with the total X-ray flux, the power-law flux and disk flux light curves constructed from the spectral fits to RXTE/PCA data made by Sobczak et al. (1999, 2000). During the first 60 days of the observed optical re-flare, we find no correspondence between the thermal component of the X-rays often associated with a disk and the optical flux -- the former remains essentially flat whereas the latter declines exponentially and exhibits three substantial dips. However, the power law flux is anti-correlated with the optical dips, suggesting that the optical flux may by up-scattered into the X-ray by the hot corona. Periodic modulations were discovered during the final stage of the outburst (May to June), with P=1.546+/-0.038 days, and during quiescence (July and August), with P=1.540+/-0.008 days. The analysis of the combined data set reveals a strong signal for a unique period at P=1.541+/-0.009 days, which we believe to be the orbital period., Comment: 26 pages, 15 figures and 3 tables. Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2000
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7. The Reappearance of the Transient Low Mass X-ray Binary X1658-298
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C. Bailyn, Stefanie Wachter, and Alan P. Smale
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Physics ,Brightness ,Astrophysics (astro-ph) ,X-ray binary ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics ,Ephemeris ,Orbital period ,Amplitude ,Space and Planetary Science ,Coincident ,Optical emission spectroscopy ,Low Mass - Abstract
In April 1999 the transient low mass X-ray binary X1658-298 resumed its strong and persistent X-ray emission after a 21-year interval of quiescence. We present RXTE data obtained soon after the reappearance, including four eclipses with a mean duration of 901.9 +/- 0.8 sec and ingress/egress times of 6-13 sec. Our updated ephemeris for the source indicates that the 7.1-hr orbital period of the system is decreasing with a timescale of 10^7 yr. Contemporaneous optical observations provide the first-ever lightcurve of V2134 Oph, the optical counterpart of X1658-298. The optical modulation is highly variable from night to night and exhibits a distinct, narrow eclipse feature of about 0.2 mag superposed on a gradual brightness variation with ~0.7-0.8 mag amplitude. Our data indicate that there is no significant offset between the time of mid-eclipse in the X-ray and optical and that the narrow optical eclipse feature is of the same duration as the X-ray eclipse. This implies an accretion disk structure characterized by enhanced optical emission coincident with the central X-ray emitting area., 13 pages including 4 figures and 3 tables; Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal
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- 1999
8. X-ray Nova XTE J1550-564: optical observations
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Raj K. Jain, C. Bailyn, Ronald A. Remillard, Jerome A. Orosz, Jeffrey E. McClintock, Astrophysics, Universiteit Utrecht, and Dep Natuurkunde
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Physics ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Observation period ,Astrophysics (astro-ph) ,X-ray ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics ,Nova (laser) ,01 natural sciences ,law.invention ,Space and Planetary Science ,law ,0103 physical sciences ,010303 astronomy & astrophysics ,Flare - Abstract
We report the identification of the optical counterpart of the X-ray transient XTE J1550-564 described in two companion papers by Sobczak et al (1999) and Remillard et al (1999). We find that the optical source brightened by approximately 4 magnitudes over the quiescent counterpart seen at B~22 on a SERC survey plate, and then decayed by approximately 1.5 magnitudes over the 7 week long observation period. There was an optical response to the large X-ray flare described by Sobczak et al (1999), but it was much smaller and delayed by roughly 1 day., Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ Letters
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- 1999
9. BVRI Light Curves for 29 Type Ia Supernovae
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M. Hamuy, M. M. Phillips, N. B. Suntzeff, R. A. Schommer, J. Maza, A. R. Antezan, M. Wischnjewsky, G. Valladares, C. Muena, L. E. Gonzales, R. Aviles, L. A. Wells, R. C. Smith, M. Navarrete, R. Covarrubias, G. M. Williger, A. R. Walker, A. C. Layden, J. H. Elias, J. A. Baldwin, M. Hernandez, H. Tirado, P. Ugarte, R. Elston, N. Saavedra, F. Barrientos, E. Costa, P. Lira, M. T. Ruiz, C. Anguita, X. Gomez, P. Ortiz, M. della Valle, J. Danziger, J. Storm, Y.-C. Kim, C. Bailyn, E. P. Rubenstein, D. Tucker, S. Cersosimo, R. A. Mendez, L. Siciliano, W. Sherry, B. Chaboyer, R. A. Koopmann, D. Geisler, A. Sarajedini, A. Dey, N. Tyson, R. M. Rich, R. Gal, R. Lamontagne, N. Caldwell, P. Guhathakurta, A. C. Phillips, P. Szkody, C. Prosser, L. C. Ho, R. McMahan, G. Baggley, K.-P. Cheng, R. Havlen, K. Wakamatsu, K. Janes, M. Malkan, F. Baganoff, P. Seitzer, M. Shara, C. Sturch, J. Hesser, A. N. P. Hartig, J. Hughes, D. Welch, T. B. Williams, H. Ferguson, P. J. Francis, L. French, M. Bolte, J. Roth, S. Odewahn, S. Howell, and W. Krzeminski
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Physics ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Astrophysics (astro-ph) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics ,Light curve ,01 natural sciences ,Rate parameter ,Supernova ,Space and Planetary Science ,0103 physical sciences ,Supernova Legacy Survey ,010303 astronomy & astrophysics - Abstract
BVRI light curves are presented for 27 Type Ia supernovae discovered during the course of the Calan/Tololo Survey and for two other SNe Ia observed during the same period. Estimates of the maximum light magnitudes in the B, V, and I bands and the initial decline rate parameter m15(B) are also given., 17 pages, figures and tables are not included (contact first author if needed), to appear in the Astronomical Journal
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- 1996
10. Evolved stars in Omega Centauri. I - Radial distribution of blue subdwarfs
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C. Bailyn, Jonathan E. Grindlay, Haldan N. Cohn, Ata Sarajedini, and Phyllis M. Lugger
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Physics ,Solar mass ,K-type main-sequence star ,Astronomy ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Helium flash ,Astrophysics ,Horizontal branch ,Subdwarf ,Stars ,Space and Planetary Science ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Omega Centauri ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Stellar evolution ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
A U - V color-magnitude diagram containing over 5000 stars from 10 fields in Omega Centauri at or brighter than the main-sequence turnoff is presented. Completeness corrections are obtained as a continuous function of magnitude and radial distance are obtained and used to show that the blue subdwarfs are centrally concentrated with respect to subgiants and stars on the horizontal branch proper. The chance probability of this result is less than 1 percent. Since the blue subdwarfs probably consist of helium-burning cores of about 0.5 solar mass surrounded by a thin hydrogen envelope, mass segregation could not produce this result if these stars had evolved singly. Two kinds of possible precursor systems are considered: pairs of degenerate dwarfs which subsequently merge to form helium-burning stars, and moderately wide binaries in which mass transfer is initiated shortly before the helium flash is ignited.
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- 1992
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11. Sacred cows
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C. Bailyn
- Subjects
Multidisciplinary - Published
- 1991
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12. Radial Velocity Study of NGC 6712
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Jonathan E. Grindlay, David W. Latham, C. Bailyn, and R. Mathieu
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Radial velocity ,Photometry (optics) ,Physics ,Stars ,Line-of-sight ,Velocity dispersion ,Astrophysics ,Mass-to-light ratio - Abstract
We report MMT Echelle radial velocity observations of 52 giants within 3 core radii of the center of NGC 6712. The mean radial velocity of these stars is -107.5 km/s, with a line of sight velocity dispersion of 4.0 km/s. We use these data, together with CCD photometry of the cluster, to derive a mass to light ratio for the center of the cluster of 0.7, an unusually low value.
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- 1988
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13. Discovery of the optical transient of GRB 990308
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Bradley E. Schaefer, J. A. Snyder, J. Hernandez, B. Roscherr, M. Deng, N. Ellman, C. Bailyn, A. Rengstorf, D. Smith, A. Levine, S. Barthelmy, P. Butterworth, K. Hurley, T. Cline, C. Meegan, C. Kouveliotou, R. M. Kippen, H.-S. Park, G. G. Williams, R. Porrata, R. Bionta, D. Hartmann, D. Band, D. Frail, S. Kulkarni, J. Bloom, S. Djorgovski, D. Sadava, F. Chaffee, F. Harris, C. Abad, B. Adams, P. Andrews, C. Baltay, A. Bongiovanni, C. Briceno, G. Bruzual, P. Coppi, F. Della Prugna, A. Dubuc, W. Emmet, I. Ferrin, F. Fuenmayor, M. Gebhard, D. Herrera, K. Honeycutt, G. Magris, J. Mateu, S. Muffson, J. Musser, O. Naranjo, A. Oemler, R. Pacheco, G. Paredes, M. Rengel, L. Romero, P. Rosenzweig, C. Sabbey, Ge. Sánchez, Gu. Sánchez, H. Schenner, J. Shin, J. Sinnott, S. Sofia, J. Stock, J. Suarez, D. Telléria, B. Vicente, K. Vieira, and K. Vivas
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Physics ,Flux ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Electron ,Astrophysics ,Schmidt camera ,Synchrotron ,Galaxy ,law.invention ,Photometry (optics) ,Space and Planetary Science ,law ,Gamma-ray burst ,Energy (signal processing) - Abstract
The optical transient of the faint Gamma Ray Burst 990308 was detected by the QUEST camera on the Venezuelan 1-m Schmidt telescope starting 3.28 hours after the burst. Our photometry gives $V = 18.32 \pm 0.07$, $R = 18.14 \pm 0.06$, $B = 18.65 \pm 0.23$, and $R = 18.22 \pm 0.05$ for times ranging from 3.28 to 3.47 hours after the burst. The colors correspond to a spectral slope of close to $f_{\nu} \propto \nu^{1/3}$. Within the standard synchrotron fireball model, this requires that the external medium be less dense than $10^{4} cm^{-3}$, the electrons contain $> 20%$ of the shock energy, and the magnetic field energy must be less than 24% of the energy in the electrons for normal interstellar or circumstellar densities. We also report upper limits of $V > 12.0$ at 132 s (with LOTIS), $V > 13.4$ from 132-1029s (with LOTIS), $V > 15.3$ at 28.2 min (with Super-LOTIS), and a 8.5 GHz flux of $ 25.7$ and $K > 23.3$. The lack of a host galaxy likely implies that it is either substantially subluminous or more distant than a red shift of $\sim 1.2$.
14. A Consolidated Framework of the Color Variability in Blazars: Long-term Optical/Near-infrared Observations of 3C 279.
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Jedidah C. Isler, C. M. Urry, P. Coppi, C. Bailyn, M. Brady, E. MacPherson, M. Buxton, and I. Hasan
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SPACE telescopes ,SOLAR flares ,SOLAR radiobursts ,BL Lacertae objects ,ACTIVE galaxies - Abstract
We evaluate the optical/near-infrared (OIR) color variability of 3C 279 in both γ-ray flaring and non-flaring states over 7-year timescales using the Small and Medium Aperture Research Telescope System in Cerro Tololo, Chile and γ-ray fluxes obtained from the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope. This observing strategy differs from previous blazar color variability studies in two key ways: (1) the reported color variability is assessed across optical through near-infrared wavelengths, and (2) the color variability is assessed over timescales significantly longer than an individual flare or ground-based observing season. We highlight 3C 279 because of its complex color variability, which is difficult to reconcile with the simple “redder-when-brighter” behavior often associated with Flat Spectrum Radio Quasar color variability. We suggest that the observed OIR color changes depend on a combination of the jet and disk emission. We parameterize this behavior in terms of a single variable, , representing a smooth transition from a disk-dominated system, to a mixed contribution, to a jet-dominated system, which provides an explanation of the long-term OIR color variability in the same blazar over time. This suggests a general scheme that could apply to OIR color variability in other blazars. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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15. THE SMARTS MULTI-EPOCH OPTICAL SPECTROSCOPY ATLAS (SaMOSA): AN ANALYSIS OF EMISSION LINE VARIABILITY IN SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE FERMI BLAZARS.
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Jedidah C. Isler, C. M. Urry, C. Bailyn, P. S. Smith, P. Coppi, M. Brady, E. MacPherson, I. Hasan, and M. Buxton
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BL Lacertae objects ,ACTIVE galaxies ,RADIO sources (Astronomy) ,QUASARS ,RADIO astronomy - Abstract
We present multi-epoch optical spectroscopy of seven southern Fermi-monitored blazars from 2008 to 2013 using the Small and Medium Aperture Research Telescope System (SMARTS), with supplemental spectroscopy and polarization data from the Steward Observatory. We find that the emission lines are much less variable than the continuum; four of seven blazars had no detectable emission line variability over the 5 yr observation period. This is consistent with photoionization primarily by an accretion disk, allowing us to use the lines as a probe of disk activity. Comparing optical emission line flux with Fermiγ-ray flux and optical polarized flux, we investigate whether relativistic jet variability is related to the accretion flow. In general, we see no such dependence, suggesting that the jet variability is likely caused by internal processes like turbulence or shock acceleration rather than a variable accretion rate. However, three sources showed statistically significant emission line flares in close temporal proximity to very large Fermiγ-ray flares. While we do not have sufficient emission line data to quantitatively assess their correlation with the γ-ray flux, it appears that in some cases the jet might provide additional photoionizing flux to the broad-line region (BLR), which implies that some γ-rays are produced within the BLR, at least for these large flares. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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16. A new spin on black-hole masses.
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Bailyn C
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- 2001
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17. The case of the blue stragglers.
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Bailyn C
- Published
- 1994
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