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Multi-waveband quasi-periodic oscillations in the light curves of blazar CTA 102 during its 2016-2017 optical outburst

Authors :
Arkadipta Sarkar
Pankaj Kushwaha
V. R. Chitnis
Paul J. Wiita
Alok C. Gupta
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
arXiv, 2020.

Abstract

Quasi-periodic fluctuations in the light curves of blazars can provide insight into the underlying emission process. This type of flux modulation hints at periodic physical processes that result in emission. CTA 102, a flat spectrum radio quasar at $z=1.032$, has displayed significant activity since 2016. The multi-waveband light curve of CTA 102 shows signs of quasi-periodic oscillations during the 2016-2017 flare. Our goal is to quantify the presence of any periodicity in the emitted flux during the mentioned period and to explore the causes that can give rise to it. Techniques such as the Lomb-Scargle periodogram and weighted wavelet z-transform were employed to observe the power emitted at different frequencies. To quantify the significance of the dominant period, Monte-Carlo techniques were employed considering an underlying smooth bending power-law model for the power spectrum. In addition, the light curve was modeled using an autoregressive process to analytically obtain the significance of the dominant period. Lastly, the light curve was modeled using a generalized autoregressive integrated moving average process to check whether introducing a periodic component results in a statistically preferable model. Significant, simultaneous quasi-periodic oscillations (QPOs) were observed in the $\gamma$-ray and optical fluxes of blazar CTA 102 during its 2016-2017 flare. The periodic flux modulation had a dominant period of $\sim$ 7.6 days and lasted for $\sim$ 8 cycles (MJD 57710-57770). All of the methods used point toward significant ($>4\sigma$) quasi-periodic modulation in both $\gamma$-ray and optical fluxes. Several possible models were explored while probing the origin of the periodicity, and by extension, the 2016--2017 optical flare. The best explanation for the detected QPO appears to be a region of enhanced emission, moving helically inside the jet.<br />Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ab32356647be5d4a711276af5dc9692c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.2010.07136