Temporal Correlations Between Optical and Gamma-ray Activity in Blazars
Daniel P. Cohen, Roger W. Romani, Alexei V. Filippenko, S. Bradley, Cenko, Benoit Lott, WeiKang Zheng, Weidong Li

TL;DR
This study analyzes optical and gamma-ray data from 157 blazars over five years, revealing correlated flaring activity with delays of a few days, supporting leptonic emission models but also indicating complex emission zones.
Contribution
It provides the first extensive temporal correlation analysis between optical and gamma-ray emissions in a large blazar sample, highlighting both correlated and uncorrelated flaring behaviors.
Findings
Strong optical-gamma-ray correlation with ~1-10 day delays.
Evidence supporting leptonic emission models.
Presence of uncorrelated flares challenges simple models.
Abstract
We have been using the 0.76-m Katzman Automatic Imaging Telescope (KAIT) at Lick Observatory to optically monitor a sample of 157 blazars that are bright in gamma rays, being detected with high significance () in one year by the Large Area Telescope (LAT) on the {\it Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope}. We attempt to observe each source on a 3-day cadence with KAIT, subject to weather and seasonal visibility. The gamma-ray coverage is essentially continuous. KAIT observations extend over much of the 5-year {\it Fermi} mission for several objects, and most have optical measurements spanning the last three years. These blazars (flat-spectrum radio quasars and BL~Lac objects) exhibit a wide range of flaring behavior. Using the discrete correlation function (DCF), here we search for temporal relationships between optical and gamma-ray light curves in the 40 brightest…
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