Abstract:
We present a multiwavelength study of the radio-loud narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxy (NLSy1) 1H 0323+342, detected
by the Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope. Multiband light curves show many orphan X-ray and optical flares
having no corresponding γ -ray counterparts. Such anomalous variability behavior can be due to different locations
of the emission region from the central source. During a large flare, a γ-ray flux doubling timescale as small as ∼3
hr is noticed. We built spectral energy distributions (SEDs) during different activity states and modeled them using
a one-zone leptonic model. The shape of the optical/UV component of the SEDs is dominated by accretion disk
emission in all the activity states. In the X-ray band, significant thermal emission from the hot corona is inferred
during quiescent and first flaring states; however, during subsequent flares, the nonthermal jet component dominates.
The γ -ray emission in all the states can be well explained by inverse-Compton scattering of accretion disk photons
reprocessed by the broad-line region. The source showed violent intra-night optical variability, coinciding with one
of the high γ-ray activity states. An analysis of the overall X-ray spectrum fitted with an absorbed power-law plus
relativistic reflection component hints at the presence of an Fe Kα line and returns a high black hole spin value
of a = 0.96 ± 0.14. We argue that 1H 0323+342 possesses dual characteristics, akin to both flat-spectrum radio
quasars (FSRQs) and radio-quiet NLSy1 galaxies, though at a low jet power regime compared to powerful FSRQs.