Synchronous Optical and Radio Polarization Variability in the Blazar OJ287
F. D. D'Arcangelo, A. P. Marscher, S. G. Jorstad, P. S. Smith, V. M., Larionov, V. A. Hagen-Thorn, G. G. Williams, W. K. Gear, D. P. Clemens, D., Sarcia, A. Grabau, E. V. Tollestrup, M. W. Buie, B. Taylor, E. Dunham

TL;DR
This study investigates the synchronized variability of flux density and polarization across optical, near-infrared, and radio frequencies in the blazar OJ287, revealing insights into jet structure and magnetic field alignment.
Contribution
It introduces a spine-sheath jet model with turbulence and shear effects to explain polarization variability and jet dynamics in OJ287.
Findings
Polarization and flux density increased in optical and radio bands during 2005-2006.
EVPA orientations suggest magnetic field alignment due to shear at the jet boundary.
A spine-sheath jet model with turbulence and shocks explains observed variability.
Abstract
We explore the variability and cross-frequency correlation of the flux density and polarization of the blazar OJ287, using imaging at 43 GHz with the Very Long Baseline Array, as well as optical and near-infrared polarimetry. The polarization and flux density in both the optical waveband and the 43 GHz compact core increased by a small amount in late 2005, and increased significantly along with the near-IR polarization and flux density over the course of 10 days in early 2006. Furthermore, the values of the electric vector position angle (EVPA) at the three wavebands are similar. At 43 GHz, the EVPA of the blazar core is perpendicular to the flow of the jet, while the EVPAs of emerging superluminal knots are aligned parallel to the jet axis. The core polarization is that expected if shear aligns the magnetic field at the boundary between flows of disparate velocities within the jet.…
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