1,991 research outputs found
Statistics of Cosmological Black Hole Jet Sources: Blazar Predictions for GLAST
A study of the statistics of cosmological black-hole jet sources is applied
to EGRET blazar data, and predictions are made for GLAST. Black-hole jet
sources are modeled as collimated relativistic plasma outflows with radiation
beamed along the jet axis due to strong Doppler boosting. The comoving rate
density of blazar flares is assumed to follow a blazar formation rate (BFR),
modeled by analytic functions based on astronomical observations and fits to
EGRET data. The redshift and size distributions of gamma-ray blazars observed
with EGRET, separated into BL Lac object (BL) and flat spectrum radio quasar
(FSRQ) distributions, are fit with monoparametric functions for the
distributions of the jet Lorentz factor \Gamma, comoving directional power
l'_e, and spectral slope. A BFR factor ~10 x greater at z ~ 1 than at present
is found to fit the FSRQ data. A smaller comoving rate density and greater
luminosity of BL flares at early times compared to the present epoch fits the
BL data. Based on the EGRET observations, ~1000 blazars consisting of ~800
FSRQs and FR2 radio galaxies and ~200 BL Lacs and FR1 radio galaxies will be
detected with GLAST during the first year of the mission. Additional AGN
classes, such as hard-spectrum BL Lacs that were mostly missed with EGRET,
could add more GLAST sources. The FSRQ and BL contributions to the EGRET
gamma-ray background at 1 GeV are estimated at the level of ~10 - 15% and ~2 -
4%, respectively. EGRET and GLAST sensitivities to blazar flares are considered
in the optimal case, and a GLAST analysis method for blazar detection is
outlined.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures, ApJ, in press, v.660, May 1, 2007 (minor changes
from previous version
Radio Luminosities and Classificatory Criteria of BL Lacertae Objects
Using the sample of radio selected BL Lacertae objects (RBLs) and X-ray
selected BL Lacertae objects (XBLs) presented by Sambruna et al. (1996), we
calculated the luminosities of radio, optical and X-ray of each source and made
the statistical analysis among the luminosities at different wave-bands,
broad-band spectral indices from radio to X-ray () and peak
frequencies (). Our results are as follows: (i) there is a positive
correlation between radio luminosity and and a
negative correlation between and . High-energy peak BL Lacs
(HBLs) and low-energy peak BL Lacs (LBLs) can be distinguished very well, the
dividing lines are probably those of (erg/sec) and
(or )0.75 for - plot and
those of (erg/sec) and for the
- plot; (ii) there is a weak positive correlation between
optical luminosity and and a negatively weak
correlation between and ; (iii) there is no correlation
between X-ray luminosity and or between and
. From our analysis, we find that synchrotron radiation is the main
X-ray radiation mechanism for HBLs while inverse Compton scattering for LBLs.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures. Submitted to A&
Six years of BeppoSAX observations of blazars: a spectral catalog
We present a spectral catalog for blazars based on the BeppoSAX archive. The
sample includes 44 High-energy peaked BL Lacs (HBLs), 14 Low-energy peaked BL
Lacs (LBLs), and 28 Flat Spectrum Radio Quasars (FSRQs). A total of 168 LECS,
MECS, and PDS spectra were analyzed, corresponding to observations taken in the
period 1996--2002. The 0.1--50 keV continuum of LBLs and FSRQs is generally
fitted by a single power law with Galactic column density. A minority of the
observations of LBLs (25%) and FSRQs (15%) is best fitted by more complex
models like the broken power law or the continuously curved parabola. These
latter models provide also the best description for half of the HBL spectra.
Complex models are more frequently required for sources with fluxes F_{2-10
keV} > 10^-11 cm-2 s-1, corresponding to spectra with higher signal-to-noise
ratio. As a result, considering sources with flux above this threshold, the
percentage of spectra requiring those models increases for all the classes. We
note that there is a net separation of X-ray spectral properties between HBLs
on one side, and LBLs and FSRQs on the other, the distinction between LBLs and
FSRQs is more blurry. This is most likely related to ambiguities in the optical
classification of the two classes.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, 7 tables. Accepted for publication in A&
Cosmic-ray ionisation in collapsing clouds
International audienceContext. Cosmic rays play an important role in dense molecular cores, affecting their thermal and dynamical evolution and initiating the chemistry. Several studies have shown that the formation of protostellar discs in collapsing clouds is severely hampered by the braking torque exerted by the entrained magnetic field on the infalling gas, as long as the field remains frozen to the gas.Aims. In this paper we examine the possibility that the concentration and twisting of the field lines in the inner region of collapse can produce a significant reduction of the ionisation fraction.Methods. To check whether the cosmic-ray ionisation rate can fall below the critical value required to maintain good coupling, we first study the propagation of cosmic rays in a model of a static magnetised cloud varying the relative strength of the toroidal/poloidal components and the mass-to-flux ratio. We then follow the path of cosmic rays using realistic magnetic field configurations generated by numerical simulations of a rotating collapsing core with different initial conditions.Results. We find that an increment of the toroidal component of the magnetic field, or, in general, a more twisted configuration of the field lines, results in a decrease in the cosmic-ray flux. This is mainly due to the magnetic mirroring effect that is stronger where larger variations in the field direction are present. In particular, we find a decrease of the cosmic-ray ionisation rate below 10-18 s-1 in the central 300â400 AU, where density is higher than about 109 cm-3. This very low value of the ionisation rate is attained in the cases of intermediate and low magnetisation (mass-to-flux ratio λ = 5 and 17, respectively) and for toroidal fields larger than about 40% of the total field.Conclusions. Magnetic field effects can significantly reduce the ionisation fraction in collapsing clouds. We provide a handy fitting formula to compute approximately the attenuation of the cosmic-ray ionisation rate in a molecular cloud as a function of the density and the magnetic configuration
VLA Observations of a New Population of Blazars
We present the first deep VLA radio images of flat-spectrum radio quasars
(FSRQ) with multiwavelength emission properties similar to those of BL Lacs
with synchrotron X-rays. Our observations of twenty-five of these sources show
that their radio morphologies are similar to those of other radio quasars.
However, their range of extended powers is more similar to that of BL Lacertae
objects (BL Lacs) and extends down to the low values typical of FR I radio
galaxies. Five out of our nine lobe-dominated sources have extended radio
powers in the range typical of both FR I and FR II radio galaxies, but their
extended radio structure is clearly FR II-like. Therefore, we have not yet
found a large population of radio quasars hosted by FR Is. Two thirds of our
sources have a core-dominated radio morpholgy and thus X-rays likely dominated
by the jet. We find that their ratios of radio core to total X-ray luminosity
are low and in the regime indicative of synchrotron X-rays. This result shows
that also blazars with strong emission lines can produce jets of high-energy
synchrotron emission and undermines at least in part the ``blazar sequence''
scenario which advocates that particle Compton cooling by an external radiation
field governs the frequency of the synchrotron emission peak.Comment: 26 pages, 33 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
Unresolved Unidentified Source Contribution to the Gamma-ray Background
The large majority of EGRET point sources remain without an identified
low-energy counterpart, and a large fraction of these sources are most likely
extragalactic. Whatever the nature of the extragalactic EGRET unidentified
sources, faint unresolved objects of the same class must have a contribution to
the diffuse extragalactic gamma-ray background (EGRB). Understanding this
component of the EGRB, along with other guaranteed contributions from known
sources, is essential if we are to use this emission to constrain exotic
high-energy physics. Here, we follow an empirical approach to estimate whether
a potential contribution of unidentified sources to the EGRB is likely to be
important, and we find that it is. Additionally, we show how upcoming GLAST
observations of EGRET unidentified sources, as well as of their fainter
counterparts, can be combined with GLAST observations of the Galactic and
extragalactic diffuse backgrounds to shed light on the nature of the EGRET
unidentified sources even without any positional association of such sources
with low-energy counterparts.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Ap
The Orion-Taurus ridge: a synchrotron radio loop at the edge of the Orion-Eridanus superbubble
Large-scale synchrotron loops are recognized as the main source of diffuse
radio-continuum emission in the Galaxy at intermediate and high Galactic
latitudes. Their origin, however, remains rather unexplained. Using a
combination of multi-frequency data in the radio band of total and polarized
intensities, for the first time in this letter, we associate one arc --
hereafter, the Orion-Taurus ridge -- with the wall of the most prominent
stellar-feedback blown shell in the Solar neighborhood, namely the
Orion-Eridanus superbubble. We traced the Orion-Taurus ridge using 3D maps of
interstellar dust extinction and column-density maps of molecular gas, . We found the Orion-Taurus ridge at a distance of 400\,pc, with a
plane-of-the-sky extent of \,pc. Its median value is
cm. Thanks to the broadband
observations below 100 MHz of the Long Wavelength Array, we also computed the
low-frequency spectral-index map of synchrotron emissivity, , in the
Orion-Taurus ridge. We found a flat distribution of with a median value
of that we interpreted in terms of depletion of
low-energy ( GeV) cosmic-ray electrons in recent supernova remnants (
- yrs). Our results are consistent with plane-of-the-sky magnetic-field
strengths in the Orion-Taurus ridge larger than a few tens of G (G). We report the first detection of diffuse synchrotron emission from
cold-neutral, partly molecular, gas in the surroundings of the Orion-Eridanus
superbubble. This observation opens a new perspective to study the multiphase
and magnetized interstellar medium with the advent of future high-sensitivity
radio facilities, such as the C-Band All-Sky Survey and the Square Kilometre
Array.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic
The number counts, luminosity functions and evolution of microwave-selected (WMAP) blazars and radio galaxies
(Abridged) We carried out an extensive search to identify the counterparts of
all the sources listed in the WMAP 3-yr catalogue using literature and archival
data. Our work led to the identification of 309 WMAP sources, 98% of which are
blazars, radio quasars or radio galaxies. At present, 15 objects still remain
without identification due to the lack of optical spectroscopic data or a clear
radio counterpart. Our results allow us to define a flux limited sample of 203
high Galactic latitude microwave sources ( Jy, ) which is virtually completely identified (99%). The microwave band
is ideally suited for blazar statistical studies since this is the part of the
em spectrum that is least affected by the superposition of spectral components
of different origin. Using this data-set we derived number counts, luminosity
functions and cosmological evolution of blazars and radio galaxies at microwave
frequencies. Our results are in good agreement with those found at radio
frequencies. The 5 GHz bivariate blazar luminosity functions are similar to
those derived from the DXRBS survey, which shows that this sample is
representative of the blazar population at 41 GHz. Microwave selected broad-
lined quasars are about 6 times more abundant than BL Lacs, a ratio that is
similar to, or larger than, that seen at radio and gamma-ray frequencies, once
spectral selection effects are taken into account. This strongly suggests that
the mechanism responsible for the generation of gamma-rays is, at first order,
the same in all blazar types. Our results confirm the findings of Giommi &
Colafrancesco (2004, 2006) that blazars and radio galaxies are the largest
contaminants of the CMB anisotropy maps. We predict that these sources are also
bright gamma-ray sources, most of which will be detected by AGILE and FERMI.Comment: 18 pages, 11 figures, 3 tables. A&A in pres
Star formation properties of sub-mJy radio sources
We investigate the star formation properties of ~800 sources detected in one
of the deepest radio surveys at 1.4 GHz. Our sample spans a wide redshift range
(~0.1 - 4) and about four orders of magnitude in star formation rate (SFR). It
includes both star forming galaxies (SFGs) and active galactic nuclei (AGNs),
further divided into radio-quiet and radio-loud objects. We compare the SFR
derived from the far infrared luminosity, as traced by Herschel, with the SFR
computed from their radio emission. We find that the radio power is a good SFR
tracer not only for pure SFGs but also in the host galaxies of RQ AGNs, with no
significant deviation with redshift or specific SFR. Moreover, we quantify the
contribution of the starburst activity in the SFGs population and the
occurrence of AGNs in sources with different level of star formation. Finally
we discuss the possibility of using deep radio survey as a tool to study the
cosmic star formation history.Comment: 18 pages, 14 figures, 1 table (available in its entirety as ancillary
data
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