Optical variability of radio-intermediate quasars
Arti Goyal, Gopal-Krishna, S. Joshi, R. Sagar, Paul J. Wiita, G. C., Anupama, D. K. Sahu

TL;DR
This study presents extensive optical monitoring of radio-intermediate quasars, revealing their low intranight variability and establishing a low duty cycle, which helps understand their relation to other AGN classes.
Contribution
First comprehensive intranight optical variability analysis of RIQs, establishing their low variability duty cycle and comparing it with other AGN classes.
Findings
INOV detection threshold of 1-2% achieved
INOV detected only on one night among 10 RIQs
INOV duty cycle estimated at approximately 9%
Abstract
We report the results of our intensive intranight optical monitoring of 8 `radio-intermediate quasars' (RIQs) having flat or inverted radio spectra. The monitoring was carried out in {\it R-} band on 25 nights during 2005-09. An intranight optical variability (INOV) detection threshold of 1--2% was achieved for the densely sampled differential light curves (DLCs). These observations amount to a large increase over those reported hitherto for this rare and sparsely studied class of quasars which can, however, play an important role in understanding the link between the dominant varieties of powerful AGN, namely the radio-quiet quasars (RQQs), radio-loud quasars (RLQs) and blazars. Despite the probable presence of relativistically boosted nuclear jets, clear evidence for INOV in our extensive observations was detected only on one night. These results demonstrate that as a class,…
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