483 research outputs found
Relativistic parsec-scale jets: I. Particle acceleration
We develop a theory of particle acceleration inside relativistic rotating
electron-positron force-free jets with spiral magnetic fields. We considered
perturbation of the stationary magnetic field structure and found that
acceleration takes place in the regions where the Alfven resonant condition
with the eigenmodes in the jet is fulfilled, i.e. where the local Alfven speed
is equal to the phase speed of an eigenmode. The acceleration mechanism is
regular acceleration by the electric field of the electromagnetic wave, which
is the eigenmode of the force-free cylindrical jet: particles drift out of the
region of the large wave amplitude near the Alfven resonant surface and gain
energy. Acceleration in the strong electric field near the Alfven resonance and
synchrotron losses combine to form a power-law energy spectrum of
ultra-relativistic electrons and positrons with index between 2 and 3 depending
upon the initial energy of the injected particles. The power law distribution
ranges from 10 MeV to 1000 MeV.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures; Astron. Astrophys. in pres
Pair Plasma Dominance in the Parsec-Scale Relativistic Jet of 3C345
We investigate whether a pc-scale jet of 3C345 is dominated by a normal
plasma or an electron-positron plasma. We present a general condition that a
jet component becomes optically thick for synchrotron self-absorption, by
extending the method originally developed by Reynolds et al. The general
condition gives a lower limit of the electron number density, with the aid of
the surface brightness condition, which enables us to compute the magnetic
field density. Comparing the lower limit with another independent constraint
for the electron density that is deduced from the kinetic luminosity, we can
distinguish the matter content. We apply the procedure to the five components
of 3C345 (C2, C3, C4, C5, and C7) of which angular diameters and radio fluxes
at the peak frequencies were obtainable from literature. Evaluating the
representative values of Doppler beaming factors by their equipartition values,
we find that all the five components are likely dominated by an
electron-positron plasma. The conclusion does not depend on the lower cutoff
energy of the power-law distribution of radiating particles.Comment: 17 page
Gamma-Ray Emissions from Pulsars: Spectra of the TEV Fluxes from Outer-Gap Accelerators
We study the gamma-ray emissions from an outer-magnetospheric potential gap
around a rotating neutron star. Migratory electrons and positrons are
accelerated by the electric field in the gap to radiate copious gamma-rays via
curvature process. Some of these gamma-rays materialize as pairs by colliding
with the X-rays in the gap, leading to a pair production cascade. Imposing the
closure condition that a single pair produces one pair in the gap on average,
we explicitly solve the strength of the acceleration field and demonstrate how
the peak energy and the luminosity of the curvature-radiated, GeV photons
depend on the strength of the surface blackbody and the power-law emissions.
Some predictions on the GeV emission from twelve rotation-powered pulsars are
presented. We further demonstrate that the expected pulsed TeV fluxes are
consistent with their observational upper limits. An implication of high-energy
pulse phase width versus pulsar age, spin, and magnetic moment is discussed.Comment: Revised to compute absolute TeV spectra (22 pages, 9 figures
Relativistic parsec-scale jets: II. Synchrotron emission
We calculate the optically thin synchrotron emission of fast electrons and
positrons in a spiral stationary magnetic field and a radial electric field of
a rotating relativistic strongly magnetized force-free jet consisting of
electron-positron pair plasma. The magnetic field has a helical structure with
a uniform axial component and a toroidal component that is maximal inside the
jet and decreasing to zero towards the boundary of the jet. Doppler boosting
and swing of the polarization angle of synchrotron emission due to the
relativistic motion of the emitting volume are calculated. The distribution of
the plasma velocity in the jet is consistent with the electromagnetic field
structure. Two spatial distributions of fast particles are considered: uniform,
and concentrated in the vicinity of the Alfven resonance surface. The latter
distribution corresponds to the regular acceleration by an electromagnetic wave
in the vicinity of its Alfven resonance surface inside the jet. The
polarization properties of the radiation have been obtained and compared with
the existing VLBI polarization measurements of parsec-scale jets in BL Lac
sources and quasars. Our results give a natural explanation of the observed
bimodality in the alignment between the electric field vector of the polarized
radiation and the projection of the jet axis on the plane of the sky. We
interpret the motion of bright knots as a phase velocity of standing spiral
eigenmodes of electromagnetic perturbations in a cylindrical jet. The degree of
polarization and the velocity of the observed proper motion of bright knots
depend upon the angular rotational velocity of the jet. The observed
polarizations and velocities of knots indicate that the magnetic field lines
are bent in the direction opposite to the direction of the jet rotation.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, Astron. Astroph. in pres
Energetics of Tev Blazars and Physical Constraints on their Emission Regions
Using multi-frequency spectra from TeV blazars in quiescent states, we obtain
the physical parameters of the emission region of blazars within the framework
of the one-zone synchrotron self-Compton (SSC) model. We numerically calculate
the steady-state energy spectra of electrons by self-consistently taking into
account the effects of radiative cooling with a proper account of the
Klein-Nishina effects. Here electrons are assumed to be injected with a
power-law spectrum and to escape on a finite time scale, which naturally leads
to the existence of a break energy scale. Although we do not use time
variabilities but utilize a model of electron escape to constrain the size of
the emission region, the resultant size turns out to be similar to that
obtained based on time variabilities. Through detailed comparison of the
predicted emission spectra with observations, we find that for Mrk 421, Mrk
501, and PKS 2155--304, the energy density of relativistic electrons is about
an order of magnitude larger than that of magnetic fields with an uncertainty
within a factor of a few.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Opacity in compact extragalactic radio sources and its effect on astrophysical and astrometric studies
The apparent position of the "core" in a parsec-scale radio jet (a compact,
bright emitting region at the narrow end of the jet) depends on the observing
frequency, owing to synchrotron self-absorption and external absorption. While
providing a tool probing physical conditions in the vicinity of the core, this
dependency poses problems for astrometric studies using compact radio sources.
We investigated the frequency-dependent shift in the positions of the cores
(core shift) observed with very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) in
parsec-scale jets. We discuss related physics, as well as its effect on radio
astrometry and the connection between radio and optical positions of
astrometric reference objects. We searched for the core shift in a sample of
277 radio sources imaged at 2.3 GHz (13 cm) and 8.6 GHz (4 cm) frequency bands
using VLBI observations made in 2002 and 2003. The core shift was measured by
referencing the core position to optically thin jet features whose positions
are not expected to change with frequency. We present here results for 29
selected active galactic nuclei (AGN) with bright distinct VLBI jet features
that can be used in differential measurements and that allow robust
measurements of the shift to be made. In these AGN, the magnitude of the
measured core shift between 2.3 and 8.6 GHz reaches 1.4 mas, with a median
value for the sample of 0.44 mas. Nuclear flares result in temporal variability
of the shift. An average shift between the radio (4 cm) and optical (6000
Angstrom) bands is estimated to be approximately 0.1 mas, and it should be
taken into account in order to provide the required accuracy of the
radio-optical reference frame connection. This can be accomplished with
multi-frequency VLBI measurements... (abridged)Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication in the
Astronomy and Astrophysics; minor corrections to the manuscript are mad
On Pair Content and Variability of Sub-Parsec Jets in Quasars
X-ray observations of blazars associated with the OVV (Optically Violently
Variable) quasars put strong constraints on the electron - positron pair
content of radio-loud quasar jets. From those observations, we infer that jets
in quasars contain many more electron - positron pairs than protons, but
dynamically are still dominated by protons. In particular, we show that pure
electron - positron jet models can be excluded, as they overpredict soft X-ray
radiation; likewise, pure proton - electron jets can be excluded, as they
predict too weak nonthermal X-ray radiation. An intermediate case is viable. We
demonstrate that jets which are initially proton-electron ("proto-jets") can be
pair-loaded via interaction with 100 - 300 keV photons produced in hot
accretion disc coronae, likely to exist in active galactic nuclei in general.
If the coronal radiation is powered by magnetic flares, the pair loading is
expected to be non-uniform and non-axisymmetric. Together with radiation drag,
this leads to velocity and density perturbations in a jet and formation of
shocks, where the pairs are accelerated. Such a scenario can explain rapid
(time scale of about a day) variability observed in OVV quasars.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
HESS J1616-508: likely powered by PSR J1617-5055
HESS J1616-508 is one of the brightest emitters in the TeV sky. Recent
observations with the IBIS/ISGRI telescope on board the INTEGRAL spacecraft
have revealed that a young, nearby and energetic pulsar, PSR J1617-5055, is a
powerful emitter of soft gamma-rays in the 20-100 keV domain. In this paper we
present an analysis of all available data from the INTEGRAL, Swift, BeppoSAX
and XMM-Newton telescopes with a view to assessing the most likely counterpart
to the HESS source. We find that the energy source that fuels the X/gamma-ray
emissions is derived from the pulsar, both on the basis of the positional
morphology, the timing evidence and the energetics of the system. Likewise, the
1.2% of the pulsar's spin down energy loss needed to power the 0.1-10 TeV
emission is also fully consistent with other HESS sources known to be
associated with pulsars. The relative sizes of the X/gamma-ray and VHE sources
are consistent with the expected lifetimes against synchrotron and Compton
losses for a single source of parent electrons emitted from the pulsar. We find
that no other known object in the vicinity could be reasonably considered as a
plausible counterpart to the HESS source. We conclude that there is good
evidence to assume that the HESS J1616-508 source is driven by PSR J1617-5055
in which a combination of synchrotron and inverse Compton processes combine to
create the observed morphology of a broad-band emitter from keV to TeV
energies.Comment: 7 pages, including 5 figures and 1 table. Accepted for publication in
MNRA
Generation of a Fireball in AGN Hot Plasmas
Motivated by relativistic jets observed in active galactic nuclei (AGN), we
simulate outflows of electron-positron pairs strongly coupled with photons from
normal electron-proton plasmas. Using multi-fluid approximation and a Monte
Carlo method of radiative transfer, we obtain spherically symmetric, steady
solutions of radiation and pair outflows for the luminosity
erg . For microphysics, Coulomb scattering, Compton scattering,
bremsstrahlung, electron-positron pair annihilation and creation are taken into
account. Although a significant amount of pairs outflow by powerful radiative
force with a mildly relativistic velocity, the temperature is not high enough
to avoid pair annihilation before the fireball becomes optically thin to
scattering. Several caveats in the simulations are also discussed.Comment: 20 pages, 7figures. accepted for publication in Ap
Kinetic Luminosity and Composition of Active Galactic Nuclei Jets
We present a new method how to discriminate the matter content of
parsec-scale jets of active galactic nuclei. By constraining the kinetic
luminosity of a jet from the observed core size at a single very long baseline
interferometry frequency, we can infer the electron density of a radio-emitting
component as a function of the composition. Comparing this density with that
obtained from the theory of synchrotron self-absorption, we can determine the
composition. We apply this procedure to the five components in the 3C~345 jet
and find that they are likely pair-plasma dominated at 11 epochs out of the
total 21 epochs, provided that the bulk Lorentz factor is less than 15
throughout the jet. We also investigate the composition of the 3C~279 jet and
demonstrate that its two components are likely pair-plasma dominated at three
epochs out of four epochs, provided that their Doppler factors are less than
10, which are consistent with observations. The conclusions do not depend on
the lower cutoff energy of radiating particles.Comment: 6 figures, 2 tables; accepted to Astroph.
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