Understanding the General Feature of Microvariability in ${\it Kepler}$ Blazar W2R 1926$+$42
Mahito Sasada, Shin Mineshige, Shinya Yamada, Hitoshi Negoro

TL;DR
This study analyzes Kepler light curves of the blazar W2R 1926+42 to characterize microvariability features, revealing a universal shot profile with exponential rise and decay timescales linked to jet particle processes.
Contribution
It introduces a shot analysis method to extract a universal microvariability profile in blazar jets, connecting variability timescales to physical mechanisms.
Findings
Identified a universal shot profile with exponential rise and decay timescales.
Linked shot timescales to a break frequency in the power spectrum.
Suggested variability asymmetry is due to particle production and dissipation.
Abstract
We analyze the monitoring light curve of a blazar W2R 192642 to examine features of microvariability by means of the "shot analysis" technique. We select 195 intra-day, flare-like variations (shots) for the continuous light curve of Quarter 14 with a duration of 100 d. In the application of the shot analysis, an averaged profile of variations is assumed to converge with a universal profile which reflects a physical mechanism generating the microvariability in a blazar jet, although light-variation profiles of selected shots show a variety. A mean profile, which is obtained by aligning the peaks of the 195 shots, is composed of a spiky-shape shot component at 0.1 d (with respect to the time of the peak), and two slow varying components ranging from 0.50 d to 0.15 d and from 0.10 d to 0.45 d of the peak time. The former spiky feature is well represented by an…
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