Disk-Jet Connection in the Radio Galaxy 3C 120
Ritaban Chatterjee, Alan P. Marscher, Svetlana G. Jorstad, Alice R., Olmstead, Ian M. McHardy, Margo F. Aller, Hugh D. Aller, Anne Lahteenmaki,, Merja Tornikoski, Talvikki Hovatta, Kevin Marshall, H. Richard Miller, Wesley, T. Ryle, Benjamin Chicka, A. J. Benker

TL;DR
This study investigates the connection between accretion disk activity and jet ejections in the radio galaxy 3C 120 through multi-frequency observations, revealing correlations between X-ray dips and jet ejections, and modeling the emission regions.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed multi-wavelength analysis linking X-ray and radio variability with jet ejections in 3C 120, supporting the disk-jet connection paradigm.
Findings
X-ray dips precede jet ejections observed in VLBA images.
X-ray and optical variations are strongly correlated, indicating a common origin.
The power spectral density shows a break consistent with black hole mass scaling.
Abstract
We present the results of extensive multi-frequency monitoring of the radio galaxy 3C 120 between 2002 and 2007 at X-ray, optical, and radio wave bands, as well as imaging with the Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA). Over the 5 yr of observation, significant dips in the X-ray light curve are followed by ejections of bright superluminal knots in the VLBA images. Consistent with this, the X-ray flux and 37 GHz flux are anti-correlated with X-ray leading the radio variations. This implies that, in this radio galaxy, the radiative state of accretion disk plus corona system, where the X-rays are produced, has a direct effect on the events in the jet, where the radio emission originates. The X-ray power spectral density of 3C 120 shows a break, with steeper slope at shorter timescale and the break timescale is commensurate with the mass of the central black hole based on observations of Seyfert…
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