-
Articles citing this article
-
Same authors
- Recommend this article
- Download citation
- Alert me if this article is cited
- Alert me if this article is corrected
|
||||||||||||||||||
A&A 388, L48-L52 (2002)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20020566
Letter
Black hole mass and binary model for BL Lac object OJ 287
F. K. Liu1, 2 and X.-B. Wu21 Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Gothenburg University & Chalmers University of Technology, 41296 Gothenburg, Sweden
2 Department of Astronomy, Peking University, 100871 Beijing, China
e-mail: wuxb@bac.pku.edu.cn
(Received 7 February 2002 / Accepted 12 April 2002 )
Abstract
Recent intensive observations of the BL Lac object OJ 287 raise
a lot of questions on the models of binary black holes, processing
jets, rotating helical jets and thermal instability of slim
accretion disks. After carefully analyzing their
radio flux and polarization data, Valtaoja et al. (2000)
propose a new binary model. Based on the black
hole mass of
estimated with the tight
correlations of the black hole masses and the bulge luminosity
or central velocity dispersion of host galaxies, we computed the
physical parameters of the new binary scenario. The impact of the
secondary on the accretion disk around the primary black hole
causes strong shocks propagating inwards and outwards, whose
arrival at the jet roots is identified with the rapid increase of
optical polarization and the large change of polarization angle
at about 0.30 yr after the first main optical flare. An increase of
optical polarization, a large rotation of positional angle
and a small synchrotron flare at 2007.05 between the optical
outbursts at 2006.75 and 2007.89 are expected by the model.
With the estimated parameters, we predicated an increase
of
-ray flux appearing about 5 days after the first
optical/IR peak, which is consistent with the EGRET observations.
Key words: galaxies: active -- galaxies: BL Lac objects: individual: OJ 287 -- galaxies: quasars: general -- accretion, accretion disk -- black hole physics
Offprint request: F. K. Liu, fkliu@bac.pku.edu.cn
SIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2002
| What is OpenURL? |
- If your librarian has set up your subscription with an OpenURL resolver, OpenURL links appear automatically on the abstract pages.
- You can define your own OpenURL resolver with your EDPS Account. In this case your choice will be given priority over that of your library.
- You can use an add-on for your browser (Firefox or I.E.) to display OpenURL links on a page (see http://www.openly.com/openurlref/). You should disable this module if you wish to use the OpenURL server that you or your library have defined.

BibSonomy
CiteUlike
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Facebook