It is believed that the gas accretion onto supermassive black holes is the main process of powering this quasar’s luminous emission, which occurs in optical, UV, and X-ray regimes and less frequently in radio waves. The observational fact that only a few percent of quasars are radio-loud is still an unresolved issue concerning the understanding of the active galactic nucleus (AGN) population. Here we present a detection of a rapid transition from the radio-quiet to the radio-loud mode in quasar 013815+00 ( z = 0.94) which coincides with changes of its UV–optical continuum and the low ionization Mg ii broadline. We interpret this as an enhancement of accretion onto a central black hole of about 10 9 solar masses. As a consequence a new radio-loud AGN was born. Its spectral and morphological properties indicate that it went through the short gigahertz-peaked spectrum phase at the beginning of its activity and has now stabilized its flux density at the level of a few millijansky. The radio morphology of 013815+00 is very compact and we predict that with such short-term jet activity its development will be very slow. The observed luminosity changes of the accretion disk are shorter than the lifetime of the new radio phase in 013815+00.
CITATION STYLE
Kunert-Bajraszewska, M., Wołowska, A., Mooley, K., Kharb, P., & Hallinan, G. (2020). Caltech-NRAO Stripe 82 Survey (CNSS). IV. The Birth of Radio-loud Quasar 013815+00. The Astrophysical Journal, 897(2), 128. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ab9598
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