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Journal ArticleDOI

Are the Variations in Quasar Optical Flux Driven by Thermal Fluctuations

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TLDR
In this article, a sample of optical light curves for 100 quasars, 70 of which have black hole mass estimates, was used to estimate the characteristic timescale and amplitude of flux variations; their approach is not affected by biases introduced from discrete sampling effects.
Abstract
We analyze a sample of optical light curves for 100 quasars, 70 of which have black hole mass estimates. Our sample is the largest and broadest used yet for modeling quasar variability. The sources in our sample have z < 2.8, 1042 λL λ(5100 A) 1046, and 106 M BH/M ☉ 1010. We model the light curves as a continuous time stochastic process, providing a natural means of estimating the characteristic timescale and amplitude of quasar variations. We employ a Bayesian approach to estimate the characteristic timescale and amplitude of flux variations; our approach is not affected by biases introduced from discrete sampling effects. We find that the characteristic timescales strongly correlate with black hole mass and luminosity, and are consistent with disk orbital or thermal timescales. In addition, the amplitude of short-timescale variations is significantly anticorrelated with black hole mass and luminosity. We interpret the optical flux fluctuations as resulting from thermal fluctuations that are driven by an underlying stochastic process, such as a turbulent magnetic field. In addition, the intranight variations in optical flux implied by our empirical model are 0.02 mag, consistent with current microvariability observations of radio-quiet quasars. Our stochastic model is therefore able to unify both long- and short-timescale optical variations in radio-quiet quasars as resulting from the same underlying process, while radio-loud quasars have an additional variability component that operates on timescales 1 day.

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The man behind the curtain: x-rays drive the uv through nir variability in the 2013 active galactic nucleus outburst in ngc 2617

TL;DR: In this article, the authors reported that NGC 2617 went through a dramatic outburst, during which its X-ray flux increased by over an order of magnitude followed by an increase of its optical/ultraviolet (UV) continuum flux.
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Modeling the time variability of sdss stripe 82 quasars as a damped random walk

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors model the time variability of ~9000 spectroscopically confirmed quasars in SDSS Stripe 82 as a damped random walk (DRW) and find that τ increases with increasing wavelength with a power-law index of 0.21 ± 0.07.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gravitationally lensed quasars and supernovae in future wide-field optical imaging surveys

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors carried out a detailed calculation of the likely yields of several planned optical imaging surveys, using realistic distributions for the lens and source properties and taking magnification bias and image configuration detectability into account.
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Active galactic nuclei: what’s in a name?

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an overview of AGN multi-wavelength properties with the aim of painting their "big picture" through observations in each electromagnetic band from radio to gamma-gamma -rays as well as AGN variability.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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