Magnetically driven non-stationary acceleration of jets in active galactic nuclei results in the leading parts of the flow being accelerated to much higher Lorentz factors than in the case of steady-state acceleration with the same parameters. The higher Doppler-boosted parts of the flow may dominate the high-energy emission of blazar jets. We suggest that highly variable GeV and TeV emission in blazars is produced by the faster moving leading edges of highly magnetized non-stationary ejection blobs, while the radio data trace the slower-moving bulk flow. Thus, the radio and gamma-ray emission regions have different, but correlated, Doppler factors. High-energy emission is generated, typically within the optically thick core, in the outer parts of the broad-line emission region, avoiding the radiative drag on the faster parts of the flow. The radio emission should correlate with the gamma-ray emission, delayed with frequency-dependent time lag of the order of weeks to months. Model predictions compare favorably with the latest Fermi γ -ray and MOJAVE radio very long baseline interferometry results. © 2010. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Lyutikov, M., & Lister, M. (2010). Resolving Doppler-factor crisis in active galactic nuclei: Non-steady magnetized outflows. Astrophysical Journal, 722(1), 197–203. https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/722/1/197
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