A Synchronized Variation of the 6.7 GHz Methanol Maser in Cepheus A
Koichiro Sugiyama, Kenta Fujisawa, Akihiro Doi, Mareki Honma, Yasuko, Isono, Hideyuki Kobayashi, Nanako Mochizuki, Yasuhiro Murata

TL;DR
This study monitors 6.7 GHz methanol masers in Cepheus A, revealing synchronized and anti-correlated flux variations, spatially arclike distribution, and suggesting infrared radiation from a common source excites the masers.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed temporal and spatial analysis of methanol masers in Cepheus A, highlighting their synchronized variability and spatial structure, and proposes a new excitation mechanism involving infrared radiation.
Findings
Masers show rapid, synchronized flux variability.
Spatial distribution forms an arclike structure of ~1400 AU.
Variability is likely driven by infrared radiation, not shocks.
Abstract
We present the results of daily monitoring of 6.7 GHz methanol maser in Cepheus A (Cep A) using Yamaguchi 32-m radio telescope as well as the results of imaging observations conducted with the JVN (Japanese VLBI Network). We indentified five spectral features, which are grouped into red-shifted (-1.9 and -2.7 km/s) and blue-shifted (-3.8, -4.2, and -4.9 km/s), and we detected rapid variabilities of these maser features within a monitoring period of 81 days. The red-shifted features decreased in flux density to 50% of its initial value, while the flux density of the blue-shifted features rapidly increased within a 30 days. The time variation of these maser features showed two remarkable properties; synchronization and anti-correlation between the red-shifted and the blue-shifted. The spatial distribution of the maser spots obtained by the JVN observation showed an arclike structure with…
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