Abstract

Data from long-term multi-frequency monitoring of the Active Galactic Nucleus (AGN) and blazar 3C 454.3 are analyzed. An unusually prolonged outburst in 2013–2017 had a duration that was twice the possible orbital period of the companion of the supermassive black hole (SMBH) located at the center of the host galaxy. It is proposed that the shape and duration of this outburst in 3C 454.3 could be the result of a coincidence between the plane of the accretion disk (AD) and the orbital plane of the companion. As a consequence, a prolonged energy release with enhanced intensity can be observed as the companion passes through the dense medium of the AD of the central SMBH. The presence of a 1.55-year orbital period in the variations of the emission of 3C 454.3 during this outburst also supports this hypothesis, as opposed to the possibility that the outburst was due to variations in γ and the Doppler factor. Small-scale flux-density fluctuations can arise during the outburst due to matter inhomogeneities with characteristic scales of about 1015 cm or more in the AD of the central SMBH and surrounding areas.

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