PKS 1954–388: RadioAstron Detection on 80,000 km Baselines and Multiwavelength Observations

We present results from a multiwavelength study of the blazar PKS 1954–388 at radio, UV, X-ray, and gamma-ray energies. A RadioAstron observation at 1.66 GHz in June 2012 resulted in the detection of interferometric fringes on baselines of 6.2 Earth-diameters. This suggests a source frame brightness...

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Veröffentlicht in:Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia 2017-04, Vol.34, Article e021
Hauptverfasser: Edwards, P. G., Kovalev, Y. Y., Ojha, R., An, H., Bignall, H., Carpenter, B., Hovatta, T., Stevens, J., Voytsik, P., Andrianov, A.S., Dutka, M., Hase, H., Horiuchi, S., Jauncey, D. L., Kadler, M., Lisakov, M., Lovell, J. E. J., McCallum, J., Müller, C., Phillips, C., Plötz, C., Quick, J., Reynolds, C., Schulz, R., Sokolovsky, K. V., Tzioumis, A. K., Zuga, V.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We present results from a multiwavelength study of the blazar PKS 1954–388 at radio, UV, X-ray, and gamma-ray energies. A RadioAstron observation at 1.66 GHz in June 2012 resulted in the detection of interferometric fringes on baselines of 6.2 Earth-diameters. This suggests a source frame brightness temperature of greater than 2 × 1012 K, well in excess of both equipartition and inverse Compton limits and implying the existence of Doppler boosting in the core. An 8.4-GHz TANAMI VLBI image, made less than a month after the RadioAstron observations, is consistent with a previously reported superluminal motion for a jet component. Flux density monitoring with the Australia Telescope Compact Array confirms previous evidence for long-term variability that increases with observing frequency. A search for more rapid variability revealed no evidence for significant day-scale flux density variation. The ATCA light-curve reveals a strong radio flare beginning in late 2013, which peaks higher, and earlier, at higher frequencies. Comparison with the Fermi gamma-ray light-curve indicates this followed ~ 9 months after the start of a prolonged gamma-ray high-state—a radio lag comparable to that seen in other blazars. The multiwavelength data are combined to derive a Spectral Energy Distribution, which is fitted by a one-zone synchrotron-self-Compton (SSC) model with the addition of external Compton (EC) emission.
ISSN:1323-3580
1448-6083
DOI:10.1017/pasa.2017.16