Abstract

The search for periodic signals from blazars has become an actively pursued field of research in recent years. This is because periodic signals bring us information about the processes occurring near the innermost regions of blazars, which are mostly inaccessible to our direct view. Such signals provide insights into some of the extreme conditions that take place in the vicinity of supermassive black holes that lead to the launch of the relativistic jets. In addition, studies of characteristic timescales in blazar light curves shed light on some of the challenging issues in blazar physics that include disk-jet connection, strong gravity near fast-rotating supermassive black holes and release of gravitational waves from binary supermassive black hole systems. However, a number of issues associated with the search for quasi-periodic oscillations (QPOs) in blazars e.g., red-noise dominance, modest significance of the detection, periodic modulation lasting for only a couple of cycles and their transient nature, make it difficult to estimate the true significance of the detection. Consequently, it also becomes difficult to make meaningful inferences about the nature of the on-going processes. In this proceedings, results of study focused on searching for QPOs in a number of blazar multi-frequency light curves are summarized. The time series analyses of long term observations of the blazars revealed the presence of year-timescale QPOs in the sources including OJ 287 (optical), Mrk 501 (gamma-ray), J1043+2408 (radio) and PKS 0219-164 (radio). A likely explanations, we discuss a number of scenarios including binary supermassive black hole systems, lense-thirring precession, and jet precession.

Highlights

  • Active galactic nuclei (AGN) are the most luminous sources in the Universe

  • The analyses revealed an underlying sub-year timescale (332 d) γ-ray quasi-periodic oscillations (QPOs) that persisted nearly 7 cycles

  • J1043+2408: A ∼ 560-d QPO was detected in the radio (15 GHz) observations of the BL Lacertae (BL Lac) source

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Summary

Introduction

As accreting matter swirls inward to the supermassive black hole at its center [1], the gravitational potential energy of the material is processed into radiation energy resulting in a large output of high energy emission. The central core, mainly the accretion disk with black hole at the center, outshines the whole galaxy. A small fraction of AGN happen to eject powerful jets aligned along the line of sight. These objects are known as blazars which are dominant sources of relativistically boosted non-thermal sources in the universe. Blazars consist of flat-spectrum radio quasars (FSRQ), some of the most powerful sources, and BL Lacertae (BL Lac) objects, cosmic sources of highest energy emission. Blazar TXS 0506+056 was linked to the first non-stellar neutrino emission detected by the IceCube experiment [2]

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