Another look at the BL Lacertae flux and spectral variability
C. M. Raiteri, M. Villata, L. Bruschini, A. Capetti, O. M. Kurtanidze,, V. M. Larionov, P. Romano, S. Vercellone, I. Agudo, H. D. Aller, M. F. Aller,, A. A. Arkharov, U. Bach, A. Berdyugin, D. A. Blinov, M. B\"ottcher, C. S., Buemi, P. Calcidese, D. Carosati, R. Casas

TL;DR
This study analyzes multi-wavelength observations of BL Lacertae, revealing how jet geometry influences flux and spectral variability, and introduces a helical jet model with two synchrotron components to explain different emission states.
Contribution
It presents a detailed multi-wavelength analysis and applies a helical jet model to interpret BL Lacertae's variability, highlighting the role of jet geometry and multiple emission regions.
Findings
UV excess likely from accretion disc thermal emission
Two synchrotron components suggest multiple emission regions
Jet alignment affects observed flux and spectral states
Abstract
The GLAST-AGILE Support Program (GASP) of the Whole Earth Blazar Telescope (WEBT) monitored BL Lacertae in 2008-2009 at radio, near-IR, and optical frequencies. During this period, high-energy observations were performed by XMM-Newton, Swift, and Fermi. We analyse these data with particular attention to the calibration of Swift UV data, and apply a helical jet model to interpret the source broad-band variability. The GASP-WEBT observations show an optical flare in 2008 February-March, and oscillations of several tenths of mag on a few-day time scale afterwards. The radio flux is only mildly variable. The UV data from both XMM-Newton and Swift seem to confirm a UV excess that is likely caused by thermal emission from the accretion disc. The X-ray data from XMM-Newton indicate a strongly concave spectrum, as well as moderate flux variability on an hour time scale. The Swift X-ray data…
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