Identifying changing jets through their radio variability
I. Liodakis, T. Hovatta, M. F. Aller, H. D. Aller, M. A. Gurwell, A., L\"ahteenm\"aki, M. Tornikoski

TL;DR
This study investigates radio variability in supermassive black hole jets over 25 years, revealing that most jets maintain constant velocity, but some show frequency-dependent relativistic effects indicating bending or acceleration.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive analysis of jet relativistic effects across multiple radio frequencies using long-term observational data and modeling, identifying sources with changing Doppler factors.
Findings
Most sources show no significant Doppler factor variation across frequencies.
17 sources exhibit frequency-dependent relativistic beaming changes.
Jet bending and acceleration are inferred in specific sources.
Abstract
Supermassive black holes launch highly relativistic jets with velocities reaching Lorentz factors as high as . How the jets accelerate to such high velocities and where along the jet do they reach terminal velocity are open questions that are tightly linked to their structure, launching and dissipation mechanisms. Changes in the beaming factor along the jets could potentially reveal jet acceleration, deceleration, or bending. We aim to (1) quantify the relativistic effects in multiple radio frequencies and (2) study possible jet velocity--viewing angle variations at parsec scales. We used the state-of-the-art code Magnetron to model light curves from the University of Michigan Radio Observatory and the Mets\"{a}hovi Radio Observatory's monitoring programs in five frequencies covering about 25 years of observations in the 4.8-37~GHz range for 61 sources. We supplement our data…
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