Kepler light curve analysis of the blazar W2R 1926+42
P. Mohan, Alok C. Gupta, R. Bachev, A. Strigachev

TL;DR
This study analyzes the long-term Kepler light curve of the blazar W2R 1926+42, revealing variability properties, characteristic timescales, a black hole mass estimate, and potential quasi-periodic oscillations, suggesting jet-based processes as the origin.
Contribution
First to estimate the black hole mass and analyze the PSD and QPO features of this blazar using Kepler data, highlighting jet-related variability mechanisms.
Findings
Variability amplitude varies from 1.8% to 43.3%.
A bending power law PSD with a timescale of ~6.2 hours was identified.
A tentative QPO at 9.1 days was detected.
Abstract
We study the long term Kepler light curve of the blazar W2R 1926+42 ( 1.6 years) which indicates a variety of variability properties during different intervals of observation. The normalized excess variance, ranges from 1.8 % in the quiescent phase and 43.3 % in the outburst phase. We find no significant deviation from linearity in the -flux relation. Time series analysis is conducted using the Fourier power spectrum and the wavelet analysis methods to study the power spectral density (PSD) shape, infer characteristic timescales and statistically significant quasi-periodic oscillations (QPOs). A bending power law with an associated timescale of hours is inferred in the PSD analysis. We obtain a black hole mass of for the first time using and the bend timescale for this…
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