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The polarisation behaviour of OJ 287 viewed through radio, millimetre, and optical observations between 2015 and 2017. / Jormanainen, J.; Hovatta, T.; Lindfors, E.; Berdyugin, A.; Chamani, W.; Fallah Ramazani, V.; Jermak, H.; Jorstad, S. G.; Lähteenmäki, A.; McCall, C.; Nilsson, K.; Smith, P.; Steele, I. A.; Tammi, J.; Tornikoski, M.; Wierda, F.

In: Astronomy and Astrophysics, Vol. 694, A206, 14.02.2025.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

Jormanainen, J, Hovatta, T, Lindfors, E, Berdyugin, A, Chamani, W, Fallah Ramazani, V, Jermak, H, Jorstad, SG, Lähteenmäki, A, McCall, C, Nilsson, K, Smith, P, Steele, IA, Tammi, J, Tornikoski, M & Wierda, F 2025, 'The polarisation behaviour of OJ 287 viewed through radio, millimetre, and optical observations between 2015 and 2017', Astronomy and Astrophysics, vol. 694, A206. https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202453009

APA

Jormanainen, J., Hovatta, T., Lindfors, E., Berdyugin, A., Chamani, W., Fallah Ramazani, V., Jermak, H., Jorstad, S. G., Lähteenmäki, A., McCall, C., Nilsson, K., Smith, P., Steele, I. A., Tammi, J., Tornikoski, M., & Wierda, F. (2025). The polarisation behaviour of OJ 287 viewed through radio, millimetre, and optical observations between 2015 and 2017. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 694, [A206]. https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202453009

Vancouver

Jormanainen J, Hovatta T, Lindfors E, Berdyugin A, Chamani W, Fallah Ramazani V et al. The polarisation behaviour of OJ 287 viewed through radio, millimetre, and optical observations between 2015 and 2017. Astronomy and Astrophysics. 2025 Feb 14;694. A206. https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202453009

Author

Jormanainen, J. ; Hovatta, T. ; Lindfors, E. ; Berdyugin, A. ; Chamani, W. ; Fallah Ramazani, V. ; Jermak, H. ; Jorstad, S. G. ; Lähteenmäki, A. ; McCall, C. ; Nilsson, K. ; Smith, P. ; Steele, I. A. ; Tammi, J. ; Tornikoski, M. ; Wierda, F. / The polarisation behaviour of OJ 287 viewed through radio, millimetre, and optical observations between 2015 and 2017. In: Astronomy and Astrophysics. 2025 ; Vol. 694.

BibTeX

@article{2cebf26b3b8046aaaf1e3ddb3ce4e095,
title = "The polarisation behaviour of OJ 287 viewed through radio, millimetre, and optical observations between 2015 and 2017",
abstract = "OJ 287 is a bright blazar with century-long observations, and one of the strongest candidates to host a supermassive black hole binary. Its polarisation behaviour between 2015 and 2017 (MJD 57300–58000) contains several interesting events that we re-contextualise in this study. We collected optical photometric and polarimetric data from several telescopes and obtained high-cadence light curves from this period. In the radio band, we collected millimetre-wavelength polarisation data from the AMAPOLA programme. We combined them with existing multi-frequency polarimetric radio results and the results of very long-baseline interferometry imaging with the Global mm-VLBI Array at 86 GHz. In December 2015, an optical flare was seen according to the general relativistic binary black hole model. We suggest that the overall activity near the accretion disk and the jet base during this time may be connected to the onset of a new moving component, K, seen in the jet in March 2017. With the additional optical data, we find a fast polarisation angle rotation of ∼210° coinciding with the December 2015 flare, hinting at a possible link between these events. Based on the 86 GHz images, we calculated a new speed of 0.12 mas/yr for K, which places it inside the core at the time of the 2015 flare. This speed also supports the scenario in which the passage of K through the quasi-stationary feature S1 could have been the trigger for the very high-energy gamma-ray flare of OJ 287 seen in February 2017. With the millimetre-polarisation data, we establish that these bands follow the centimetre-band data but show a difference during the time when K passes through S1. This indicates that the millimetre bands trace substructures of the jet that are still unresolved in the centimetre bands.",
keywords = "galaxies: active, BL Lacertae objects: individual: OJ 287, galaxies: jets, Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena, BL Lacertae objects: individual: OJ 287, Galaxies: active, Galaxies: jets",
author = "J. Jormanainen and T. Hovatta and E. Lindfors and A. Berdyugin and W. Chamani and {Fallah Ramazani}, V. and H. Jermak and Jorstad, {S. G.} and A. L{\"a}hteenm{\"a}ki and C. McCall and K. Nilsson and P. Smith and Steele, {I. A.} and J. Tammi and M. Tornikoski and F. Wierda",
year = "2025",
month = feb,
day = "14",
doi = "10.1051/0004-6361/202453009",
language = "русский",
volume = "694",
journal = "ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS",
issn = "0004-6361",
publisher = "EDP Sciences",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The polarisation behaviour of OJ 287 viewed through radio, millimetre, and optical observations between 2015 and 2017

AU - Jormanainen, J.

AU - Hovatta, T.

AU - Lindfors, E.

AU - Berdyugin, A.

AU - Chamani, W.

AU - Fallah Ramazani, V.

AU - Jermak, H.

AU - Jorstad, S. G.

AU - Lähteenmäki, A.

AU - McCall, C.

AU - Nilsson, K.

AU - Smith, P.

AU - Steele, I. A.

AU - Tammi, J.

AU - Tornikoski, M.

AU - Wierda, F.

PY - 2025/2/14

Y1 - 2025/2/14

N2 - OJ 287 is a bright blazar with century-long observations, and one of the strongest candidates to host a supermassive black hole binary. Its polarisation behaviour between 2015 and 2017 (MJD 57300–58000) contains several interesting events that we re-contextualise in this study. We collected optical photometric and polarimetric data from several telescopes and obtained high-cadence light curves from this period. In the radio band, we collected millimetre-wavelength polarisation data from the AMAPOLA programme. We combined them with existing multi-frequency polarimetric radio results and the results of very long-baseline interferometry imaging with the Global mm-VLBI Array at 86 GHz. In December 2015, an optical flare was seen according to the general relativistic binary black hole model. We suggest that the overall activity near the accretion disk and the jet base during this time may be connected to the onset of a new moving component, K, seen in the jet in March 2017. With the additional optical data, we find a fast polarisation angle rotation of ∼210° coinciding with the December 2015 flare, hinting at a possible link between these events. Based on the 86 GHz images, we calculated a new speed of 0.12 mas/yr for K, which places it inside the core at the time of the 2015 flare. This speed also supports the scenario in which the passage of K through the quasi-stationary feature S1 could have been the trigger for the very high-energy gamma-ray flare of OJ 287 seen in February 2017. With the millimetre-polarisation data, we establish that these bands follow the centimetre-band data but show a difference during the time when K passes through S1. This indicates that the millimetre bands trace substructures of the jet that are still unresolved in the centimetre bands.

AB - OJ 287 is a bright blazar with century-long observations, and one of the strongest candidates to host a supermassive black hole binary. Its polarisation behaviour between 2015 and 2017 (MJD 57300–58000) contains several interesting events that we re-contextualise in this study. We collected optical photometric and polarimetric data from several telescopes and obtained high-cadence light curves from this period. In the radio band, we collected millimetre-wavelength polarisation data from the AMAPOLA programme. We combined them with existing multi-frequency polarimetric radio results and the results of very long-baseline interferometry imaging with the Global mm-VLBI Array at 86 GHz. In December 2015, an optical flare was seen according to the general relativistic binary black hole model. We suggest that the overall activity near the accretion disk and the jet base during this time may be connected to the onset of a new moving component, K, seen in the jet in March 2017. With the additional optical data, we find a fast polarisation angle rotation of ∼210° coinciding with the December 2015 flare, hinting at a possible link between these events. Based on the 86 GHz images, we calculated a new speed of 0.12 mas/yr for K, which places it inside the core at the time of the 2015 flare. This speed also supports the scenario in which the passage of K through the quasi-stationary feature S1 could have been the trigger for the very high-energy gamma-ray flare of OJ 287 seen in February 2017. With the millimetre-polarisation data, we establish that these bands follow the centimetre-band data but show a difference during the time when K passes through S1. This indicates that the millimetre bands trace substructures of the jet that are still unresolved in the centimetre bands.

KW - galaxies: active

KW - BL Lacertae objects: individual: OJ 287

KW - galaxies: jets

KW - Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena

KW - BL Lacertae objects: individual: OJ 287

KW - Galaxies: active

KW - Galaxies: jets

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/8e625e56-e91e-3e93-ba27-3d39324dcec1/

U2 - 10.1051/0004-6361/202453009

DO - 10.1051/0004-6361/202453009

M3 - статья

VL - 694

JO - ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS

JF - ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS

SN - 0004-6361

M1 - A206

ER -

ID: 134442863