1,336 research outputs found
Thermal and Non-thermal Plasmas in the Galaxy Cluster 3C 129
We describe new Chandra spectroscopy data of the cluster which harbors the
prototypical "head tail" radio galaxy 3C 129 and the weaker radio galaxy 3C
129.1. We combined the Chandra data with Very Large Array (VLA) radio data
taken at 0.33, 5, and 8 GHz (archival data) and 1.4 GHz (new data). We also
obtained new HI observations at the Dominion Radio Astrophysical Observatory
(DRAO) to measure the neutral Hydrogen column density in the direction of the
cluster with arcminute angular resolution. The Chandra observation reveals
extended X-ray emission from the radio galaxy 3C 129.1 with a total luminosity
of 1.5E+41 erg/s. The X-ray excess is resolved into an extended central source
of ~2 arcsec (1 kpc) diameter and several point sources with an individual
luminosity up to 2.1E+40 erg/s. In the case of the radio galaxy 3C 129, the
Chandra observation shows, in addition to core and jet X-ray emission reported
in an earlier paper, some evidence for extended, diffuse X-ray emission from a
region east of the radio core. The 12 arcsec x 36 arcsec (6 kpc x 17 kpc)
region lies "in front" of the radio core, in the same direction into which the
radio galaxy is moving. We use the radio and X-ray data to study in detail the
pressure balance between the non-thermal radio plasma and the thermal Intra
Cluster Medium (ICM) along the tail of 3C 129 which extends over 15 arcmin (427
kpc). Depending on the assumed lower energy cutoff of the electron energy
spectrum, the minimum pressure of the radio plasma lies a factor of between 10
and 40 below the ICM pressure for a large part of the tail. We discuss several
possibilities to explain the apparent pressure mismatch.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. Refereed manuscript. 14 pages, 8
figures, additional panel of Fig. 3 shows asymmetric ICM distributio
Low Frequency VLA Observations of Abell 754: Evidence for a Cluster Radio Halo and Possible Radio Relics
We present 74 MHz and 330 MHz VLA observations of Abell 754. Diffuse,
halo-like emission is detected from the center of the cluster at both
frequencies. At 330 MHz the resolution of 90'' distinguishes this extended
emission from previously known point sources. In addition to the halo and at a
much lower level, outlying steep-spectrum emission regions straddle the cluster
center and are seen only at 74 MHz. The location, morphology and spectrum of
this emission are all highly suggestive of at least one, and possibly two
cluster radio relics. Easily obtained higher resolution, higher sensitivity VLA
observations at both frequencies are required to confirm the extended nature of
the halo-like emission and the 74 MHz relic detections. However, since there is
prior evidence that this cluster is or has recently been in the process of a
major merger event, the possible discovery of relics in this system is of great
interest in light of recent observational and theoretical evidence in favor of
a merger-relic connection. We discuss the possible role the merger shock waves,
which are seen in the X-ray emission, may have played in the formation of the
halo and radio relics in A754.Comment: 15 pages including 4 figures. Accepted for publication by Ap
A Search for the Near-Infrared Counterpart to GCRT J1745-3009
We present an optical/near-infrared search for a counterpart to the
perplexing radio transient GCRT J1745-3009, a source located ~1 degree from the
Galactic Center. Motivated by some similarities to radio bursts from nearby
ultracool dwarfs, and by a distance upper limit of 70 pc for the emission to
not violate the 1e12 K brightness temperature limit for incoherent radiation,
we searched for a nearby star at the position of GCRT J1745-3009. We found only
a single marginal candidate, limiting the presence of any late-type star to >1
kpc (spectral types earlier than M9), >200 pc (spectral types L and T0-T4), and
>100 pc (spectral types T4-T7), thus severely restricting the possible local
counterparts to GCRT J1745-3009. We also exclude any white dwarf within 1 kpc
or a supergiant star out to the distance of the Galactic Center as possible
counterparts. This implies that GCRT J1745-3009 likely requires a coherent
emission process, although whether or not it reflects a new class of sources is
unclear.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
Radio Spectral Index and Expansion of 3C58
We present new observations of the plerionic supernova remnant 3C58 with the
VLA at 74 and 327 MHz. In addition, we re-reduced earlier observations at 1.4
and 4.9 GHz taken in 1973 and 1984. Comparing these various images, we find
that: 1. the remnant has a flat and relatively uniform spectral index
distribution, 2. any expansion of the remnant with time is significantly less
than that expected for uniform, undecelerated expansion since the generally
accepted explosion date in 1181 A.D., and 3. there is no evidence for a
non-thermal synchrotron emission shell generated by a supernova shock wave,
with any such emission having a surface brightness of <1 x 10^(-21) W / (m^2 Hz
sr) at 327 MHz.Comment: 18 pages, 7 Figures, Latex, Accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
Discovery of 35 New Supernova Remnants in the Inner Galaxy
We report the discovery of up to 35 new supernova remnants (SNRs) from a 42
arcsec resolution 90cm multi-configuration Very Large Array survey of the
Galactic plane covering 4.5 deg< l <22.0 deg and |b| < 1.25 deg. Archival 20cm,
11cm, and 8 micron data have also been used to identify the SNRs and constrain
their properties. The 90cm image is sensitive to SNRs with diameters 2.5 arcmin
to 50 arcmin and down to a surface brightness limit of about 10^{-21} W m^{-2}
Hz^{-1} sr^{-1}. This survey has nearly tripled the number of SNRs known in
this part of the Galaxy, and represents an overall 15% increase in the total
number of Galactic SNRs. These results suggest that further deep low frequency
surveys of the inner Galaxy will solve the discrepancy between the expected
number of Galactic SNRs and the significantly smaller number of currently known
SNRs.Comment: 5 pages; Accepted to ApJL, high resolution figures available from
http://www.ifa.hawaii.edu/~cbrogan/high_res
Low-Frequency Radio Transients in the Galactic Center
We report the detection of a new radio transient source, GCRT J1746-2757,
located only 1.1 degrees north of the Galactic center. Consistent with other
radio transients toward the Galactic center, this source brightened and faded
on a time scale of a few months. No X-ray counterpart was detected. We also
report new 0.33 GHz measurements of the radio counterpart to the X-ray
transient source, XTE J1748-288, previously detected and monitored at higher
radio frequencies. We show that the spectrum of XTE J1748-288 steepened
considerably during a period of a few months after its peak. We also discuss
the need for a more efficient means of finding additional radio transients
Radio Observations of HD 80606 Near Planetary Periastron
This paper reports Very Large Array observations at 325 and 1425 MHz (90cm
and 20cm) during and near the periastron passage of HD 80606b on 2007 November
20. We obtain flux density limits (3-sigma) of 1.7 mJy and 48 microJy at 325
and 1425 MHz, respectively, equivalent to planetary luminosity limits of 2.3 x
10^{24} erg/s and 2.7 x 10^{23} erg/s. These are well above the Jovian value
(at 40 MHz) of 2 x 10^{18} erg/s. The motivation for these observations was
that the planetary magnetospheric emission is driven by a stellar
wind-planetary magnetosphere interaction so that the planetary luminosity would
be elevated. Near periastron, HD 80606b might be as much as 3000 times more
luminous than Jupiter. Recent transit observations of HD 80606b provide
stringent constraints on the planetary mass and radius, and, because of the
planet's highly eccentric orbit, its rotation period is likely to be
"pseudo-synchronized" to its orbital period, allowing a robust estimate of the
former. We are able to make robust estimates of the emission frequency of the
planetary magnetospheric emission and find it to be around 60--90 MHz. We
compare HD 80606b to other high-eccentricity systems and assess the detection
possibilities for both near-term and more distant future systems. Of the known
high eccentricity planets, only HD 80606b is likely to be detectable, as HD
20782B b and HD 4113b are both likely to have weaker magnetic field strengths.
Both the forthcoming "EVLA low band" system and the Low Frequency Array may be
able to improve upon our limits for HD 80606b, and do so at a more optimum
frequency. If the low-frequency component of the Square Kilometre Array
(SKA-lo) and a future lunar radio array are able to approach their thermal
noise limits, they should be able to detect an HD 80606b-like planet, unless
the planet's luminosity increases by substantially less than a factor of 3000.Comment: 9 pages; accepted for publication in A
High-Resolution, Wide-Field Imaging of the Galactic Center Region at 330 MHz
We present a wide field, sub-arcminute resolution VLA image of the Galactic
Center region at 330 MHz. With a resolution of ~ 7" X 12" and an RMS noise of
1.6 mJy/beam, this image represents a significant increase in resolution and
sensitivity over the previously published VLA image at this frequency. The
improved sensitivity has more than tripled the census of small diameter sources
in the region, has resulted in the detection of two new Non Thermal Filaments
(NTFs), 18 NTF candidates, 30 pulsar candidates, reveals previously known
extended sources in greater detail, and has resulted in the first detection of
Sagittarius A* in this frequency range.
A version of this paper containing full resolution images may be found at
http://lwa.nrl.navy.mil/nord/AAAB.pdf.Comment: Astronomical Journal, Accepted 62 Pages, 21 Figure
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