Location of Gamma-ray emission and magnetic field strengths in OJ 287
J.A. Hodgson, T.P. Krichbaum, A.P. Marscher, S.G. Jorstad, B. Rani, I., Marti-Vidal, U. Bach, S. Sanchez, M. Bremer, M. Lindqvist, M. Uunila, J., Kallunki, P. Vicente, L. Fuhrmann, E. Angelakis, V. Karamanavis, I. Myserlis,, I. Nestoras, C. Chidiac, A. Sievers, M. Gurwell

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution VLBI and gamma-ray data to locate gamma-ray emission sites and estimate magnetic field strengths in the jet of OJ 287, revealing correlations between gamma-ray activity and radio flares.
Contribution
It provides new constraints on the location of gamma-ray emission and magnetic field strengths in the jet of OJ 287 using combined multi-frequency VLBI and gamma-ray observations.
Findings
Gamma-ray flares originate from the core or downstream features.
Magnetic field >1.6 G in the core and >0.4 G downstream.
Upper limit of the core's distance from jet apex is >6.0 pc.
Abstract
The Gamma-ray BL Lac object OJ 287 is known to exhibit inner-parsec "jet-wobbling", high degrees of variability at all wavelengths and quasi-stationary features including an apparent (~100 deg) position angle change in projection on the sky plane. Sub-50 micro-arcsecond resolution 86 GHz observations with the global mm-VLBI array (GMVA) supplement ongoing multi-frequency VLBI blazar monitoring at lower frequencies. Using these maps together with cm/mm total intensity and Gamma-ray observations from Fermi/LAT from 2008-2014, we aimed to determine the location of Gamma-ray emission and to explain the inner-mas structural changes. Observations with the GMVA offer approximately double the angular resolution compared with 43 GHz VLBA observations and allow us to observe above the synchrotron self-absorption peak frequency. The jet was spectrally decomposed at multiple locations along the…
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