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We report the first results of a systematic investigation to characterize blazar variability power spectral densities (PSDs) at optical frequencies using densely sampled (5--15 minutes integration time), high photometric accuracy ($lesssim$0.2--0.5%) R-band intranight light curves, covering timescales ranging from several hours to $sim$15,minutes. Our sample consists of 14 optically bright blazars, including nine BL Lacertae objects (BL Lacs) and five flat-spectrum radio quasars (FSRQs) which have shown statistically significant variability during 29 monitoring sessions. We model the intranight PSDs as simple power--laws and derive the best-fit slope along with uncertainty using the `power spectral response method. Our main results are the following: (1) on 19 out of 29 monitoring sessions, the intranight PSDs show an acceptable fit to simple power-laws at the rejection confidence $leq$ 90%; (2) for these 19 instances, the PSD slopes show a large range from 1.4 to 4.0, consistent with statistical characters of red (slope$sim$2) and black (slope$geq$3) noise stochastic processes; (3) the average PSD slopes for the BL Lacs and FSRQs are indistinguishable from one another; (4) the normalization of intranight PSDs for individual blazar sources which were monitored on more than one occasion turns out to be consistent with one another with a few exceptions. The average PSD slope, 2.9$pm$0.3 (1$sigma$ uncertainty) is steeper than the red-noise type character of variability found on longer timescales (many decades to days), indicative of a cutoff in the variability spectrum on timescales around a few days at the synchrotron frequencies of the emission spectrum.
We report the results of our optical (VRI) photometric observations of the TeV blazar 1ES 0806$+$524 on 153 nights during 2011-2019 using seven optical telescopes in Europe and Asia. We investigated the variability of the blazar on intraday as well a
To search for optical variability on a wide range of timescales, we have carried out photometric monitoring of 3C 454.3, 3C 279 and S5 0716+714. CCD magnitudes in B, V, R and I pass-bands were determined for $sim$ 7000 new optical observations from 1
We present the results of an optical photometric monitoring program of 10 extremely radio loud broad absorption line quasars (RL-BALQSOs) with radio-loudness parameter, R, greater than 100 and magnitude g_i < 19. Over an observing run of about 3.5-6.
We have monitored the flat spectrum radio quasar, 3C 279, in the optical $B$, $V$, $R$ and $I$ passbands from 2018 February to 2018 July for 24 nights, with a total of 716 frames, to study flux, colour and spectral variability on diverse timescales.
We report an extension of our program to search for radio-quiet BL Lac candidates using intra-night optical variability (INOV) as a probe. The present INOV observations cover a well-defined representative set of 10 `radio-quiet weak-emission-line qua