Correlated Multi-Waveband Variability in the Blazar 3C~279 from 1996 to 2007
R. Chatterjee, S. G. Jorstad, A. P. Marscher, H. Oh, I. M. McHardy, M., F. Aller, H. D. Aller, T. J. Balonek, H. R. Miller, W. T. Ryle, G. Tosti, O., Kurtanidze, M. Nikolashvili, V. M. Larionov, V. A. Hagen-Thorn

TL;DR
This study presents a comprehensive multi-waveband analysis of blazar 3C 279 over 11 years, revealing correlated variability, jet dynamics, and insights into the origin of flares across X-ray and optical bands.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed correlation and time delay analysis of multi-waveband variability in 3C 279, linking jet behavior with flux changes and flare origins.
Findings
Flux variations are significantly correlated across bands.
X-ray leads optical in some flares, reverse in others.
Jet orientation changes influence flux modulation.
Abstract
We present the results of extensive multi-waveband monitoring of the blazar 3C~279 between 1996 and 2007 at X-ray energies (2-10 keV), optical R band, and 14.5 GHz, as well as imaging with the Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) at 43 GHz. In all bands the power spectral density corresponds to "red noise" that can be fit by a single power law over the sampled time scales. Variations in flux at all three wavebands are significantly correlated. The time delay between high and low frequency bands changes substantially on time scales of years. A major multi-frequency flare in 2001 coincided with a swing of the jet toward a more southerly direction, and in general the X-ray flux is modulated by changes in the position angle of the jet near the core. The flux density in the core at 43 GHz--increases in which indicate the appearance of new superluminal knots--is significantly correlated with the…
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