Parsec-scale radio morphology and variability of a changing-look AGN: the case of Mrk 590
J. Y. Koay, M. Vestergaard, H. E. Bignall, C. Reynolds, B. M. Peterson

TL;DR
This study examines the parsec-scale radio emission of the changing-look AGN Mrk 590, revealing a compact core with variability linked to accretion rate changes, indicating a radiatively inefficient accretion mode and possible coronal wind emission.
Contribution
First detailed VLBA imaging of Mrk 590's radio core, linking radio variability to accretion rate changes and proposing coronal winds as a significant emission component.
Findings
Detected a compact radio core with no significant jets.
Observed a 46% decrease in radio flux density since the 1990s.
Radio variability correlates with optical-UV and X-ray luminosity decline.
Abstract
We investigate the origin of the parsec-scale radio emission from the changing-look active galactic nucleus (AGN) of Mrk 590, and examine whether the radio power has faded concurrently with the dramatic decrease in accretion rates observed between the 1990s and the present. We detect a compact core at 1.6 GHz and 8.4 GHz using new Very Long Baseline Array observations, finding no significant extended, jet-like features down to 1 pc scales. The flat spectral index () and high brightness temperature () indicate self-absorbed synchrotron emission from the AGN. The radio to X-ray luminosity ratio of , similar to that in coronally active stars, suggests emission from magnetized coronal winds, although unresolved radio jets are also consistent with the data. Comparing new Karl G. Jansky Very…
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