Radio and X-ray variability in the Seyfert galaxy NGC 4051
Sadie Jones, Ian McHardy, Derek Moss, Nick Seymour, Elme Breedt, Phil, Uttley, Elmar Kording, Valeriu Tudose

TL;DR
This study presents simultaneous X-ray and radio observations of NGC 4051, revealing a weak jet structure, minimal radio variability, and correlations with X-ray activity, suggesting a soft-state behavior similar to Galactic black hole systems.
Contribution
First detailed quasi-simultaneous radio and X-ray monitoring of NGC 4051, identifying a weak jet and analyzing variability patterns in a Seyfert galaxy.
Findings
NGC 4051 shows a weak jet structure with three compact components.
Radio variability is minimal (~25%) and less than X-ray variability.
No significant large-scale radio variability over 16 months.
Abstract
We present intensive quasi-simultaneous X-ray and radio monitoring of the narrow line Seyfert 1 galaxy NGC 4051, over a 16 month period in 2000-2001. Observations were made with the Rossi Timing X-ray Explorer (RXTE) and the Very Large Array (VLA) at 8.4 and 4.8 GHz. In the X-ray band NGC 4051 behaves much like a Galactic black hole binary (GBH) system in a `soft-state'. In such systems, there has so far been no firm evidence for an active, radio-emitting jet like those found in `hard state' GBHs. VLBI observations of NGC 4051 show three co-linear compact components. This structure resembles the core and outer hot spots seen in powerful, jet-dominated, extragalactic radio sources and suggests the existence of a weak jet. Radio monitoring of the core of NGC 4051 is complicated by the presence of surrounding extended emission and by the changing array configurations of the VLA. Only in…
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