B2 1308+326: a changing-look blazar or not?

Abstract

In our previous study, we identified a shift in the synchrotron peak frequency of the blazar B2 1308+326 from 1012.9 Hz to 1014.8 Hz during a flare, suggesting it could be a changing-look blazar (CLB). In this work, we investigate the CL behaviour of B2 1308+326 by analysing a newly acquired optical spectrum and comparing it with an archival spectrum. We find that between the two epochs, the continuum flux increased by a factor of 4.4, while the Mg II emission line flux decreased by a factor of 1.40.2. Additionally, the equivalent width of the Mg II line reduced from 20 \ to 3 , indicating an apparent shift from a flat-spectrum radio quasar (FSRQ) class to a BL Lacertae (BL Lac) class. Despite this apparent change, the ratio of accretion disk luminosity to Eddington luminosity remains > 10-2 during both epochs, indicating efficient accretion persists in B2 1308+326. The measured black hole mass remains consistent with an average M BH = 8.44 M. Our findings suggest that B2 1308+326 is not a genuine CLB, but rather an intrinsic FSRQ that emerges as a BL Lac during high-flux states due to enhanced non-thermal emission.

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