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On the Location of the Gamma-ray Emission in the 2008 Outburst in the BL Lacertae Object AO 0235+164 through Observations across the Electromagnetic Spectrum

Authors :
Agudo, Ivan
Marscher, Alan P.
Jorstad, Svetlana G.
Larionov, Valeri M.
Gomez, Jose L.
Lahteenmaki, Anne
Smith, Paul S.
Nilsson, Kari
Readhead, Anthony C. S.
Aller, Margo F.
Heidt, Jochen
Gurwell, Mark
Thum, Clemens
Wehrle, Ann E.
Nikolashvili, Maria G.
Aller, Hugh D.
Benitez, Erika
Blinov, Dmitriy A.
Hagen-Thorn, Vladimir A.
Hiriart, David
Jannuzi, Buell T.
Joshi, Manasvita
Kimeridze, Givi N.
Kurtanidze, Omar M.
Kurtanidze, Sofia O.
Lindfors, Elina
Molina, Sol N.
Morozova, Daria A.
Nieppola, Elina
Olmstead, Alice R.
Reinthal, Riho
Roca-Sogorb, Mar
Schmidt, Gary D.
Sigua, Lorand A.
Sillanpaa, Aimo
Takalo, Leo
Taylor, Brian
Tornikoski, Merja
Troitsky, Ivan S.
Zook, Alma C.
Wiesemeyer, Helmut
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

We present observations of a major outburst at centimeter, millimeter, optical, X-ray, and gamma-ray wavelengths of the BL Lacertae object AO 0235+164. We analyze the timing of multi-waveband variations in the flux and linear polarization, as well as changes in Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) images at 7mm with 0.15 milliarcsecond resolution. The association of the events at different wavebands is confirmed at high statistical significance by probability arguments and Monte-Carlo simulations. A series of sharp peaks in optical linear polarization, as well as a pronounced maximum in the 7 mm polarization of a superluminal jet knot, indicate rapid fluctuations in the degree of ordering of the magnetic field. These results lead us to conclude that the outburst occurred in the jet both in the quasi-stationary "core" and in the superluminal knot, both parsecs downstream of the supermassive black hole. We interpret the outburst as a consequence of the propagation of a disturbance, elongated along the line of sight by light-travel time delays, that passes through a standing recollimation shock in the core and propagates down the jet to create the superluminal knot. The multi-wavelength light curves vary together on long time-scales (months/years), but the correspondence is poorer on shorter time-scales. This, as well as the variability of the polarization and the dual location of the outburst, agrees with the expectations of a multi-zone emission model in which turbulence plays a major role in modulating the synchrotron and inverse Compton fluxes.<br />Comment: Accepted for Publication in the Astrophysical Journal Letters. 7 pages (including 5 figures). Minor corrections with regard to previous version, as proposed by the referee

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1105.0549
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/2041-8205/735/1/L10