Probing the gamma-ray variability in 3C279 using broadband observations
B. Rani, T. P. Krichbaum, S.-S. Lee, K. Sokolovsky, S. Kang, D.-Y., Byun, D. Mosunova, J. A. Zensus

TL;DR
This study investigates gamma-ray flares in 3C 279 through broadband observations, revealing correlated optical and gamma-ray activity, polarization changes, and insights into emission mechanisms and jet physics.
Contribution
It provides new multi-wavelength observational evidence linking optical, radio, and gamma-ray emissions and explores their implications for emission regions and processes in 3C 279.
Findings
Optical and gamma-ray flares are correlated with high confidence.
Radio polarization increases coincide with X-ray flux peaks.
Gamma-ray variability is lower than optical, indicating complex jet conditions.
Abstract
We present the results of a broadband radio-to-GeV observing campaign organized to get a better understanding of the radiation processes responsible for the -ray flares observed in 3C 279. The total intensity and polarization observations of the source were carried out between December 28, 2013 and January 03, 2014 using the Fermi-LAT, Swift-XRT, Swift-UVOT, and KVN telescopes. A prominent flare observed in the optical/near-UV passbands was found to be correlated with a concurrent -ray flare at a confidence level 95, which suggests a co-spatial origin of the two. Moreover, the flaring activity in the two regimes was accompanied by no significant spectral variations. A peak in the X-ray light curve coincides with the peaks of the fractional polarization curves at 43 and 86 GHz radio bands. No prominent variation was noticed for the total intensity and the electric…
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