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The 72-Hour WEBT Microvariability Observation of Blazar S5 0716+714 in 2009

Authors :
Valeri M. Larionov
Joe Pollock
Ram Sagar
Jianghua Wu
Rumen Bachev
S. Dhalla
J. M. Ohlert
E. Lindfors
Prajval Shastri
Stephane Vennes
Xu Zhou
Bindu Rani
Y. Efimov
D. Capezzali
Omar M. Kurtanidze
A. Khanuja
P. Roustazadeh
O. J. A. Bravo Calle
Pertti Pääkkönen
Carolin Villforth
Arto Oksanen
A. Strigachev
D. Blinov
Markus Böttcher
Brian W. Murphy
A. Sanchez
R. Reinthal
A. Lamerato
D. Rodriguez
C.-U. Lee
D. Carosati
Alok C. Gupta
James R. Webb
K. Nilsson
A. Sillanpää
J. M. Coloma
M. Villata
S. M. Hu
A. Collins
R. A. Chigladze
P. Calcidese
L. O. Takalo
J. A. Ros
H. Hollingsworth
Gopal Bhatta
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Context. The international whole earth blazar telescope (WEBT) consortium planned and carried out three days of intensive micro-variability observations of S5 0716+714 from February 22, 2009 to February 25, 2009. This object was chosen due to its bright apparent magnitude range, its high declination, and its very large duty cycle for micro-variations. Aims. We report here on the long continuous optical micro-variability light curve of 0716+714 obtained during the multi-site observing campaign during which the Blazar showed almost constant variability over a 0.5 magnitude range. The resulting light curve is presented here for the first time. Observations from participating observatories were corrected for instrumental diff?erences and combined to construct the overall smoothed light curve. Methods. Thirty-six observatories in sixteen countries participated in this continuous monitoring program and twenty of them submitted data for compilation into a continuous light curve. The light curve was analyzed using several techniques including Fourier transform, Wavelet and noise analysis techniques. Those results led us to model the light curve by attributing the variations to a series of synchrotron pulses. Results. We have interpreted the observed microvariations in this extended light curve in terms of a new model consisting of individual stochastic pulses due to cells in a turbulent jet which are energized by a passing shock and cool by means of synchrotron emission. We obtained an excellent fit to the 72-hour light curve with the synchrotron pulse model.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....40e7c90654336ca664db6dd00511848c