311 research outputs found
Interpreting the time variable RM observed in the core region of the TeV blazar Mrk 421
In this work we interpret and discuss the time variable rotation measure (RM)
found, for the first time over a 1-yr period, in the core region of a blazar.
These results are based on a one-year, multi-frequency (15, 24, and 43 GHz)
Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) monitoring of the TeV blazar Markarian 421 (Mrk
421). We investigate the Faraday screen properties and its location with
respect to the jet emitting region. Given that the 43 GHz radio core flux
density and the RM time evolution suggest a similar trend, we explore the
possible connection between the RM and the accretion rate. Among the various
scenarios that we explore, the jet sheath is the most promising candidate for
being the main source of Faraday rotation. During the one-year observing period
the RM trend shows two sign reversals, which may be qualitatively interpreted
within the context of the magnetic tower models. We invoke the presence of two
nested helical magnetic fields in the relativistic jet with opposite
helicities, whose relative contribution produce the observed RM values. The
inner helical field has the poloidal component () oriented in the
observer's direction and produces a positive RM, while the outer helical field,
with in the opposite direction, produces a negative RM. We assume
that the external helical field dominates the contribution to the observed RM,
while the internal helical field dominates when a jet perturbation arises
during the second observing epoch. Being the intrinsic polarization angle
parallel to the jet axis, a pitch angle of the helical magnetic field
is required. Additional scenarios are also considered to
explain the observed RM sign reversals.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures. Published on MNRA
Exploring the connection between radio and GeV-TeV gamma-ray emission in the 1FHL and 2FHL AGN samples
The Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) revealed that blazars, representing the
most extreme radio-loud active galactic nuclei (AGN) population, dominate the
census of the gamma-ray sky, and a significant correlation was found between
radio and gamma-ray emission in the 0.1-100 GeV energy range. However, the
possible connection between radio and very high energy (VHE, E>0.1 TeV)
emission still remains elusive, owing to the lack of a homogeneous coverage of
the VHE sky. The main goal of this work is to quantify and assess the
significance of a possible connection between the radio emission on parsec
scale measured by the very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) and GeV-TeV
gamma-ray emission in blazars, which is a central issue for understanding the
blazar physics and the emission processes. We investigate the radio VLBI and
high energy gamma-ray emission by using two large and unbiased AGN samples
extracted from the first and second Fermi-LAT catalogs of hard gamma-ray
sources detected above 10 GeV (1FHL) and 50 GeV (2FHL). For comparison, we
perform the same correlation analysis by using the 0.1-300 GeV gamma-ray energy
flux provided by the third Fermi-LAT source catalog. We find that the
correlation strength and significance depend on the gamma-ray energy range with
a different behavior among the blazar sub-classes. Overall, the radio and
gamma-ray emission above 10 GeV turns out to be uncorrelated for the full
samples and for all of the blazar sub-classes with the exception of high
synchrotron peaked (HSP) objects, which show a strong and significant
correlation. On the contrary, when 0.1-300 GeV gamma-ray energies are
considered, a strong and significant correlation is found for the full blazar
sample as well as for all of the blazar sub-classes. We interpret and explain
this correlation behavior within the framework of the blazar spectral energy
distribution properties.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, 3 tables. Accepted for publication in Astronomy
and Astrophysic
On the radio and GeV-TeV gamma-ray emission connection in Fermi blazars
The Fermi-LAT revealed that the census of the gamma-ray sky is dominated by
blazars. Looking for a possible connection between radio and gamma-ray emission
is a central issue for understanding the blazar physics, and various works were
dedicated to this topic. However, while a strong and significant correlation
was found between radio and gamma-ray emission in the 0.1-100 GeV energy range,
the connection between radio and very high energy (VHE, E>0.1 TeV) emission is
still elusive. The main reason is the lack of a homogeneous VHE sky coverage,
due to the operational mode of the imaging atmospheric Cherenkov telescopes.
With the present work we aim to quantify and assess the significance of the
possible connection between high-resolution radio emission, on milliarcsecond
scale, and GeV-TeV gamma-ray emission in blazars. For achieving our goal we
extract two large and unbiased blazar samples from the 1FHL and 2FHL Fermi
catalogs, above 10 GeV and 50 GeV, respectively. To investigate how the
correlation evolves as the gamma-ray energy increases, we perform the same
analysis by using the 0.1-300 GeV 3FGL gamma-ray energy fluxes. When we
consider the 0.1-300 GeV gamma-ray energy range, we find a strong and
significant correlation for all of the blazar sub-classes. Conversely, when we
consider the gamma-ray emission above 10 GeV the correlation with the radio
emission vanishes, with the exception of the blazar sub-class of high
synchrotron peaked objects.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, 1 table. For the proceedings of the 7th
International Fermi Symposiu
Jets in FR0 radio galaxies
The local radio-loud AGN population is dominated by compact sources named
FR0s. These sources show features, for example the host type, the mass of the
supermassive black hole (SMBH), and the multi-band nuclear characteristics,
that are similar to those of FRI radio galaxies. However, in the radio band,
while FR0 and FRI share the same nuclear properties, the kiloparsec-scale
diffuse component dominant in FRI is missing in FR0s. With this project we
would like to study the parsec-scale structure in FR0s in comparison with that
of FRI sources. To this end we observed 18 FR0 galaxies with the VLBA at 1.5
and 5 GHz and/or with the EVN at 1.7 GHz and produced detailed images at
milliarcsec resolution of their nuclear emission to study the jet and core
structure. All sources have been detected but one. Four sources are unresolved,
even in these high-resolution images; jets have been detected in all other
sources. We derived the distribution of the jet-to-counter-jet ratio of FR0s
and found that it is significantly different from that of FRIs, suggesting
different jet bulk speed velocities. Combining the present data with published
data of FR0 with VLBI observations, we derive that the radio structure of FR0
galaxies shows strong evidence that parsec-scale jets in FR0 sources are mildly
relativistic with a bulk velocity on the order of 0.5c or less. A jet structure
with a thin inner relativistic spine surrounded by a low-velocity sheath could
be in agreement with the SMBH and jet launch region properties.Comment: 12 pages, 16 figures Accepted for the publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
The connection between radio and high energy emission in black hole powered systems in the SKA era
Strong evidence exists for a highly significant correlation between the radio
flux density and gamma-ray energy flux in blazars revealed by Fermi. However,
there are central issues that need to be clarified in this field: what are the
counterparts of the about 30% of gamma-ray sources that are as yet
unidentified? Are they just blazars in disguise or they are something more
exotic, possibly associated with dark matter? How would they fit in the
radio-gamma ray connection studied so far?
With their superb sensitivity, SKA1-MID and SKA1-SUR will help to resolve all
of these questions. Even more, while the radio-MeV/GeV connection has been
firmly established, a radio-VHE connection has been entirely elusive so far.
The advent of CTA in the next few years and the expected CTA-SKA1 synergy will
offer the chance to explore this connection, even more intriguing as it
involves the opposite ends of the electromagnetic spectrum and the acceleration
of particles up to the highest energies.
We are already preparing to address these questions by exploiting data from
the various SKA pathfinders and precursors. We have obtained 18 cm European
VLBI Network observations of E>10 GeV sources, with a detection rate of 83%.
Moreover, we are cross correlating the Fermi catalogs with the MWA
commissioning survey: when faint gamma-ray sources are considered, pure
positional coincidence is not significant enough for selecting counterparts and
we need an additional physical criterion to pinpoint the right object. It can
be radio spectral index, variability, polarization, or compactness, needing
high angular resolution in SKA1-MID; timing studies can also reveal pulsars,
which are often found from dedicated searches of unidentified gamma-ray
sources. SKA will be the ideal instrument for investigating these
characteristics in conjunction with CTA.
(abridged)Comment: 12 pages, to be published in the proceedings of "Advancing
Astrophysics with the Square Kilometre Array", PoS(AASKA14)15
Prophylactic salpingectomy in premenopausal low-risk women for ovarian cancer: Primum non nocere
Abstract Objective The objective of this study is to compare ovarian function and surgical outcomes between patients affected by benign uterine pathologies submitted to total laparoscopic hysterectomy (TLH) plus salpingectomy and women in which standard TLH with adnexal preservation was performed. Methods We retrospectively compared data of 79 patients who underwent TLH plus bilateral salpingectomy (group A), with those of 79 women treated by standard TLH without adnexectomy (sTLH) (group B). Ovarian reserve modification, expressed as the difference between 3months post-operative and pre-operative values of Anti-Mullerian Hormone (AMH), Follicle Stimulating Hormone (FSH), Antral Follicle Count (AFC), mean ovarian diameters and Peak Systolic Velocity (PSV), was recorded for each patient. For each surgical procedure, operative time, variation of hemoglobin level (ΔHb), postoperative hospital stay, postoperative return to normal activity, and complication rate were recorded as secondary outcomes. Results According to our post-hoc analysis , this equivalence study resulted to have a statistical power of 96.8%. Significant difference was not observed between groups with respect to ΔAMH ( p = 0.35 ), ΔFSH ( p = 0.15 ), ΔAFC ( p = 0.09 ), Δ mean ovarian diameters ( p = 0.57 ) and ΔPSV ( p = 0.61 ). In addition, secondary outcomes such as operative time ( p = 0.79 ), ΔHb ( p = 0.41 ), postoperative hospital stay ( p = 0.16 ), postoperative return to normal activity ( p = 0.11 ) and complication rate also did not show any significant difference. Conclusions The addition of bilateral salpingectomy to TLH for prevention of ovarian cancer in women who do not carry a BRCA1/2 mutations do not show negative effects on the ovarian function. In addition, no perioperative complications are related to the salpingectomy step in TLH
A parsec-scale wobbling jet in the high-synchrotron peaked blazar PG 1553+113
Context. The detection of quasi-periodic variability in active galactic nuclei in general, and in blazars in particular, is key to our understanding of the origin and nature of these objects as well as their cosmological evolution. PG 1553+113 is the first blazar showing an approximately two-year quasi-periodic pattern in its γ-ray light curve, which is also revealed at optical frequencies. Aims: Such quasi-periodicity might have a geometrical origin, possibly related to the precessing nature of the jet, or could be intrinsic to the source and related to pulsational accretion flow instabilities. In this work we investigate and characterise the high-resolution radio emission properties of PG 1553+113 on parsec scales in order to differentiate between these different physical scenarios. Methods: We monitored the source with the very long baseline array (VLBA) at 15, 24, and 43 GHz during an entire cycle of γ-ray activity in the period 2015-2017, with a cadence of about 2 months, both in total and polarised intensity. We constrained the jet position angle across the different observing epochs by investigating the total intensity ridge lines. Results: We find a core-dominated source with a limb-brightened jet structure extending for ∼1.5 mas in the northeast direction whose position angle varies in time in the range ∼40°-60°. No clear periodic pattern can be recognized in the VLBA light curves during 2015-2017 or in the 15 GHz Owens Valley Radio Observatory light curve during the period 2008-2018. The core region polarisation percentage varies in the range ∼1-4%, and the polarisation angle varies from being roughly parallel to roughly transverse to the jet axis. We estimate a rotation measure value in the core region of ∼-1.0 ± 0.4 × 104 rad m-2. The brightness temperature (TB) is found to decrease as the frequency increases with an intrinsic value of ∼1.5 × 1010 K and the estimated Doppler factor is ∼1.4. Conclusions: Although the jet wobbling motion indicates that geometrical effects can produce an enhanced emission through the Doppler boosting modulation, additional mechanisms are required in order to account for the quasi-periodic variability patterns observed in γ rays. The intrinsic TB value indicates that the total energy in the core region is dominated by the magnetic field
The TeV blazar Markarian 421 at the highest spatial resolution
We report the results obtained for the AGN Markarian 421 by model-fitting the
data in the visibility plane, studing the proper motion of jet components, the
light curve, and the spectral index of the jet features. We compare the radio
data with optical light curves obtained at the Steward Observatory, considering
also the optical polarization information. Mrk 421 has a bright nucleus and a
one-sided jet extending towards the north-west for a few parsecs. The
model-fits show that brightness distribution is well described using 6-7
circular Gaussian components, four of which are reliably identified at all
epochs; all components are effectively stationary except for component D, at
~0.4 mas from the core, whose motion is however subluminal. Analysis of the
light curve shows two different states, with the source being brighter and more
variable in the first half of 2011 than in the second half. The highest flux
density is reached in February. A comparison with the optical data reveals an
increase of the V magnitude and of the fractional polarization simultaneous
with the enhancement of the radio activity.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure
Parsec scale polarization properties of the TeV blazar Markarian 421
In this work we present a polarization analysis at radio frequencies of
Markarian 421, one of the closest (z=0.03) TeV blazars. The observations were
obtained, both in total and in polarized intensity, with the Very Long Baseline
Array (VLBA) at 15, 24, and 43 GHz throughout 2011, with one observation per
month (for a total of twelve epochs). We investigate the magnetic field
topology and the polarization structure on parsec scale and their evolution
with time. We detect polarized emission both in the core and in the jet region,
and it varies with frequency, location and time. In the core region we measure
a mean fractional polarization of about 1-2%, with a peak of about 4% in March
at 43 GHz; the polarization angle is almost stable at 43 GHz, but it shows
significant variability in the range 114-173 deg at 15 GHz. In the jet region
the polarization properties show a more stable behavior; the fractional
polarization is about 16% and the polarization angle is nearly perpendicular to
the jet axis. The higher EVPA variability observed at 15 GHz is due both to a
variable Faraday rotation effect and to opacity. The residual variability
observed in the intrinsic polarization angle, together with the low degree of
polarization in the core region, could be explained with the presence of a
blend of variable cross-polarized subcomponents within the beam.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, proceedings of the 12th European VLBI Network
Symposium and Users Meeting (7-10 October 2014, Cagliari, Italy
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