Optical Emission and Particle Acceleration in a Quasi-stationary Component in the Jet of OJ 287
We analyze the linear polarization of the relativistic jet in BL Lacertae object OJ 287 as revealed by multi-epoch Very Long Baseline Array images at 43 GHz and monitoring observations at optical bands. The electric-vector position angle of the optical polarization matches that at 43 GHz at locations that are often in the compact millimeter-wave >core> or, at other epochs, coincident with a bright, quasi-stationary emission feature ∼0.2 mas (∼0.9 pc projected on the sky) downstream from the core. This implies that electrons with high enough energies to emit optical synchrotron and γ-ray inverse Compton radiation are accelerated both in the core and at the downstream feature, the latter of which lies ≥10 pc from the central engine. The polarization vector in the stationary feature is nearly parallel to the jet axis, as expected for a conical standing shock capable of accelerating electrons to GeV energies.© 2018. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. ; The authors thank Dr. Ioannis Myserlis for a critical review of a draft of this manuscript. The authors acknowledge financial support by MEXT/JSPS Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research on Innovative Areas (No. 25120007). M.S. was supported during this study by a JSPS Postdoctoral Fellowship for Research Abroad. The research at Boston University was supported in part by National Science Foundation grant AST-1615796 and NASA Fermi Guest Investigator Program grants NNX14AQ58G and 80NSSC17K0649. The St. Petersburg University team acknowledges support from Russian Science Foundation grant 17-12-01029. I.A. acknowledges support by a Ramon y Cajal grant of the Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad (MINECO) of Spain. The research at the IAA-CSIC was supported in part by the MINECO through grants AYA2016-80889-P, AYA2013-40825-P, and AYA2010-14844; and by the regional government of Andalucia through grant P09-FQM-4784. Calar Alto Observatory is jointly operated by the Max-Planck-Institut fur Astronomie and the IAA-CSIC. The VLBA is an instrument of the Long Baseline Observatory (LBO). The LBO is a facility of the National Science Foundation operated under cooperative agreement by Associated Universities, Inc. Data from the Steward Observatory spectro-polarimetric monitoring project were used. This program was supported by Fermi Guest Investigator grants NNX08AW56G, NNX09AU10G, NNX12AO93G, and NNX15AU81G.