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Around the Clock Observations of the Q0957+561 A,B Gravitationally Lensed Quasar II: Results for the second observing season

Authors :
Colley, Wesley N.
Schild, Rudolph E.
Abajas, Cristina
Alcalde, David
Aslan, Zeki
Bikmaev, Ilfan
Chavushyan, Vahram
Chinarro, Luis
Cournoyer, Jean-Philippe
Crowe, Richard
Dudinov, Vladimir
Kathinka, Anna
Evans, Dalland
Jeon, Young-Beom
Goicoechea, Luis J.
Golbasi, Orhan
Khamitov, Irek
Kjernsmo, Kjetil
Lee, Hyun Ju
Lee, Jonghwan
Lee, Ki Won
Lee, Myung Gyoon
Lopez-Cruz, Omar
Mediavilla, Evencio
Moffatt, Anthony F. J.
Mujica, Raul
Ullan, Aurora M.
Oscoz, Alexander
Park, Myeong-Gu
Purves, Norman
Sakhibullin, Nail
Sinelnikov, Igor
Stabell, Rolf
Stockton, Alan
Teuber, Jan
Thompson, Roy
Woo, Hwa-Sung
Zheleznyak, Alexander
Colley, Wesley N.
Schild, Rudolph E.
Abajas, Cristina
Alcalde, David
Aslan, Zeki
Bikmaev, Ilfan
Chavushyan, Vahram
Chinarro, Luis
Cournoyer, Jean-Philippe
Crowe, Richard
Dudinov, Vladimir
Kathinka, Anna
Evans, Dalland
Jeon, Young-Beom
Goicoechea, Luis J.
Golbasi, Orhan
Khamitov, Irek
Kjernsmo, Kjetil
Lee, Hyun Ju
Lee, Jonghwan
Lee, Ki Won
Lee, Myung Gyoon
Lopez-Cruz, Omar
Mediavilla, Evencio
Moffatt, Anthony F. J.
Mujica, Raul
Ullan, Aurora M.
Oscoz, Alexander
Park, Myeong-Gu
Purves, Norman
Sakhibullin, Nail
Sinelnikov, Igor
Stabell, Rolf
Stockton, Alan
Teuber, Jan
Thompson, Roy
Woo, Hwa-Sung
Zheleznyak, Alexander
Publication Year :
2002

Abstract

We report on an observing campaign in March 2001 to monitor the brightness of the later arriving Q0957+561 B image in order to compare with the previously published brightness observations of the (first arriving) A image. The 12 participating observatories provided 3543 image frames which we have analyzed for brightness fluctuations. From our classical methods for time delay determination, we find a 417.09 +/- 0.07 day time delay which should be free of effects due to incomplete sampling. During the campaign period, the quasar brightness was relatively constant and only small fluctuations were found; we compare the structure function for the new data with structure function estimates for the 1995--6 epoch, and show that the structure function is statistically non-stationary. We also examine the data for any evidence of correlated fluctuations at zero lag. We discuss the limits to our ability to measure the cosmological time delay if the quasar's emitting surface is time resolved, as seems likely.<br />Comment: AAS LaTeX, 5 PostScript figures

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1312114511
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1086.368076