Correlated Variability in the Blazar 3C 454.3

ORAL

Abstract

The blazar 3C 454.3 was revealed by the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope to be in an exceptionally high flux state in July 2008. Accordingly, we performed a multi- wavelength monitoring campaign on this blazar using IR and optical observations from the SMARTS telescopes, optical, UV and X-ray data from the Swift satellite, and public-release gamma-ray data from Fermi. We find an excellent correlation between the IR, optical, UV and gamma-ray light curves, with a time lag of less than one day. The amplitude of the infrared variability is comparable to that in gamma- rays, and larger than at optical or UV wavelengths. The X-ray flux is not strongly correlated with either the gamma-rays or longer wavelength data. These variability characteristics find a natural explanation in the external Compton model, in which electrons with Lorentz factor $\gamma \sim 10^{3-4}$ radiate synchrotron emission in the infrared-optical and also scatter accretion disk or emission line photons to gamma-ray energies, while much cooler electrons ($\gamma \sim 10^{1-2}$) produce X-rays by scattering synchrotron or other ambient photons.

Authors

  • Erin Bonning

    Yale University

  • Charles Bailyn

    Yale University

  • C. Megan Urry

    Yale University

  • Michelle Buxton

    Yale University

  • Giovanni Fossati

    Rice University

  • Laura Maraschi

    INAF - Osservatorio di Brera

  • Paolo Coppi

    Yale University

  • Richard Scalzo

    Yale University

  • Jedidah Isler

    Yale University

  • Allison Kaptur

    Yale University