Characterizing X-ray Variability of TeV Blazars
Jun Kataoka

TL;DR
This review discusses methods for analyzing X-ray variability in TeV blazars, emphasizing the importance of temporal studies, challenges with data sampling, and potential insights from upcoming high-sensitivity observations.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of temporal analysis techniques for TeV blazar X-ray variability and addresses data sampling issues affecting these methods.
Findings
X-ray variability indicates strong red-noise in TeV blazars.
Temporal analysis is complicated by data gaps and short observation durations.
Upcoming MAXI observations may enhance understanding of blazar variability.
Abstract
In this review, I will discuss how to characterize synchrotron X-ray variability of TeV blazars by using the observed/simulated light curves. Apparently, temporal studies provide independent and complementary information to the spectral studies, but surprisingly little attention has been paid especially for the blazar study. Only exception is a classical argument for presence of "time lag", which may (or may not) reflect the diffrence of synchrotron cooling timescale. Also very recently, it was suggested that the X-ray variability of TeV blazars indicates a strong red-noise, compared to a fractal, flickering-noise of Seyfert galaxies. Various temporal techniques are proposed in literature, e.g., the power spectrum density (PSD), the structure function (SF), and the discrete correlation function (DCF) and other analysis tools, but special care must be taken if the data are not well…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Computational Physics and Python Applications · Particle physics theoretical and experimental studies
