Bayesian fitting of an eccentric Keplerian orbit to the radio light curve of PKS 2131-021 gives e = 0.053 ± 0.015 without red noise but favors a circular orbit plus DRW noise with e < 0.15.
Bimodal radio variability in OVRO-40m-monitored blazars
2 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
Blazars are known to show periods of quiescence followed by outbursts visible throughout the electromagnetic spectrum. We present a novel maximum likelihood approach to capture this bimodal behavior by examining blazar radio variability in the flux-density domain. We separate quiescent and flaring components of a source's light curve by modeling its flux-density distribution as a series of "off" and "on" states. Our modeling allows us to extract information regarding the flaring ratio, duty cycle, and the modulation index in the "off"-state, in the "on"-state, as well as throughout the monitoring period of each blazar. We apply our method to a flux-density-limited subsample from the Owens Valley Radio observatory's 15 GHz blazar monitoring program, and explore differences in the variability characteristics between BL Lacs and FSRQs as well as between $\gamma$-ray detected and non-detected sources. We find that: (1) BL Lacs are more variable and have relatively larger outbursts than the FSRQs, (2) unclassified blazar candidates in our sample show similar variability characteristics as the FSRQs, and (3) $\gamma$-ray detected differ from the $\gamma$-ray non-detected sources in all their variability properties, suggesting a link between the production of $\gamma$-rays and the mechanism responsible for the radio variability. Finally, we fit distributions for blazar flaring ratios, duty cycles, and on- and off- modulation indices that can be used in population studies of variability-dependent blazar properties.
fields
astro-ph.HE 2years
2026 2verdicts
UNVERDICTED 2representative citing papers
Follow-up observations reclassify 7 of 10 candidate ultra extreme high-energy-peaked BL Lacs as AGNs, with only 2 possibly compatible with MeV-peaked SEDs.
citing papers explorer
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Constraining Orbital Eccentricity of a Supermassive Black Hole Binary Candidate PKS 2131-0211
Bayesian fitting of an eccentric Keplerian orbit to the radio light curve of PKS 2131-021 gives e = 0.053 ± 0.015 without red noise but favors a circular orbit plus DRW noise with e < 0.15.
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Hunting for extreme high-energy-peaked BL Lacs: Rare to find and difficult to classify
Follow-up observations reclassify 7 of 10 candidate ultra extreme high-energy-peaked BL Lacs as AGNs, with only 2 possibly compatible with MeV-peaked SEDs.