IC 4516 is a type E elliptical galaxy located in Boötes. Its redshift is 0.045618 which corresponds IC 4516 to be located 667 million light-years from Earth. The galaxy was discovered by Lewis Swift on June 2, 1898, which was his last discovery after spending half a century observing astronomical objects, starting with the observation of the Great Comet in 1843. Features IC 4516 is classified a radio galaxy, specially a Fanaroff-Riley type 2 (FR II). It has an active nucleus and is the brightest member in the galaxy cluster, WHL J145423.5+162119. IC 4516 contains a strong radio source in its center called 3C 306. The radio source is identified to be stronger than 25 mJy on the Green Bank 4.85 GHz sky maps. Based on its infrared-radio flux ratio as well as infrared spectral indices and radio morphologies, it is classified to be a "starburst" or "monster". Further results show that the rms scatter in logarithmic infrared-radio q is not more compared to σq = 0.16 for starburst galaxies which is selected at 4.85 GHz. and Hooper et al. This is suggested that IC 4516 is an AGN with a "mis-aligned" jet in with the direction of ~>20° towards Earth. Its possible IC 4516 is a low-luminosity core-dominated radio galaxy that is expected to have a proportionally lower γ-ray luminosity to the point it can't be detected individually by Fermi, based on the relation of core radio and its luminosity. which shows if the null hypothesis is correct, the variability index is correct, then it is distributed as χ2 with 19 degrees of freedom. This suggests evidence for variability index to be at the ≥3σ level.
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