SMARTS optical and infrared monitoring of 12 gamma-ray bright blazars
E. W. Bonning (1), C. M. Urry (1), C. Bailyn (1), M. Buxton (1), R., Chatterjee (1), P. Coppi (1), G. Fossati (2), J. Isler (1), L. Maraschi (3), ((1) Yale University, (2) Rice University, (3) INAF/Brera)

TL;DR
This study presents multiwavelength optical and infrared monitoring data for 12 gamma-ray bright blazars, revealing correlations between fluxes, variability patterns, and spectral behaviors that inform models of jet emission and accretion processes.
Contribution
The paper provides the first comprehensive multiwavelength light curves for a sample of gamma-ray bright blazars, analyzing their variability and spectral properties in detail.
Findings
Optical and infrared fluxes are well correlated across all sources.
FSRQs show decreasing variability amplitude towards IR wavelengths, indicating thermal disk emission.
BL Lac objects exhibit consistent variability across wavelengths, implying weak or inefficient disks.
Abstract
We present multiwavelength data for twelve blazars observed from 2008-2010 as part of an ongoing optical-infrared photometric monitoring project. Sources were selected to be bright, southern (dec < 20 deg) blazars observed by the Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope, with daily and weekly gamma-ray fluxes made available from the start of the Fermi mission. Light curves are presented for the twelve blazars in BVRJK at near-daily cadence. We find that optical and infrared fluxes are well correlated in all sources. Gamma-ray bright flat spectrum radio quasars (FSRQs) in our sample have optical/infrared emission correlated with gamma-rays consistent with inverse Compton-scattering models for GeV emission. In FSRQs, the variability amplitude decreases towards optical/IR wavelengths, consistent with the presence of a thermal emission component from the accretion disk varying on significantly…
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