2014
DOI: 10.1134/s1063773714090011
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Correlation of near-infrared and optical variability of NGC 4151 in 2008–2013

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Cited by 17 publications
(36 citation statements)
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“…This paper is a continuation of our series of studies on the correlation between infrared and optical variability in NGC 4151, as well as the variability of the IR lag values and their dependence on the wavelength (Oknyaskii, 1993; Oknyansky et al, 1999Oknyansky et al, , 2006Oknyansky et al, , 2008Oknyansky et al, , 2014aOknyansky et al, , 2014b. In these studies we found that the delay in the K band is different in different activity states of the AGN, and also that the ratio of the lag values in the bands L and K varies considerably in the range 1-3.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 79%
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“…This paper is a continuation of our series of studies on the correlation between infrared and optical variability in NGC 4151, as well as the variability of the IR lag values and their dependence on the wavelength (Oknyaskii, 1993; Oknyansky et al, 1999Oknyansky et al, , 2006Oknyansky et al, , 2008Oknyansky et al, , 2014aOknyansky et al, , 2014b. In these studies we found that the delay in the K band is different in different activity states of the AGN, and also that the ratio of the lag values in the bands L and K varies considerably in the range 1-3.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 79%
“…A detailed historical review and discussion of the obtained results was carried out in a previous paper (Oknyansky et al, 2014a). In the present paper, using more complete observational material and using two independent methods of analysis, we confirmed the relative independence of infrared lags from the wavelength during 2010-2015.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…It should be noted that there are several pieces of evidence from the studies of hot-dust-poor AGNs, dust reverberation mapping and infrared polarimetry, suggesting that emission from quasar accretion discs extends well into near-infrared wavelengths, which means that an accretion disc does not truncate even at a few thousands of RS (e.g., Kishimoto, Antonucci & Blaes 2005;Tomita et al 2006;Kishimoto et al 2007Kishimoto et al , 2008Hönig & Kishimoto 2010;Hao et al 2010;Lira et al 2011;Koshida et al 2014;Oknyansky et al 2014, and references therein). Therefore, we fix the disc outer radius as xout = 2 16 for convenience of the model calculations.…”
Section: Dexter and Agol's Formalizationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is a very compact region (see for example Wandel et al, 1999;Peterson et al, 2004;Kaspi et al, 2005;Bentz et al, 2009;Bentz & Katz, 2015), nested in a small dusty torus (see for example Koshida et al, 2009;Kishimoto et al, 2011;Stalevski et al, 2012;Koshida et al, 2014;Oknyansky et al, 2014) at the core of AGN, where the optical and ultraviolet BELs originate (see for example Sulentic et al, 2002;Gaskell, 2009;Marziani et al, originating from galaxy mergers, the accretion rate is modulated by the SMBBHS, and shows 1-3 distinct periods, while for Q < 0.05 the rate shows no variability. They also pointed out that for smaller mass ratios (about Q < 0.3), the radius of the cavity is smaller.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%