188 research outputs found
1.4-GHz Luminosity Function of Galaxies from the Las Campanas Redshift Survey
A preliminary 1.4 GHz RLF at redshift of about 0.14 is derived from the Las
Campanas Redshift Survey (LCRS) and the NVSS radio data. No significant
evolution has been found at this redshift in comparison to the 'local' RLF.Comment: 2 pages including 2 Postscript figures, uses crckapb10.st
GB2 0909+353: One of the Largest Double Radio Source
The evidence are given that the radio source GB2 0909+353 (GB2 catalogue:
Machalski 1978; ICRS 2000.0 coordinates: 09 12 51.7, +35 10 10) is likely one
of the largest classical doubles known, though its optical identification is
not certain. Our deep VLA observations at 5 GHz did not reveal a radio core
brighter than 0.5 mJy/beam at this frequency. Thus a distance to the source is
evaluated using photometric -- redshift estimates of the faint galaxies in the
optical field. The equipartition magnetic field and energy density in the
source is calculated and compared with corresponding parameters of other
`giant' radio sources known, showing extremely low values of both physical
parameters of the source investigated. On the other hand, the age of
relativistic electrons, and the advance speed of the `hot spot' in the source
are typical for much smaller and brighter 3CR sources.Comment: 10 pages with 3 Postscript figures, accepted to Acta Astronomic
Giant Radio Sources in View of the Dynamical Evolution of FRII-type Population
The time evolution of giant (D>1 Mpc) lobe-dominated galaxies is analysed on
the basis of dynamical evolution of the entire FRII-type population.Comment: 4 pages, 2 Postscript figures, uses baltlat1.sty To be published in
"Radio astronomy at 70: from Karl Jansky to microjansky", JENAM-2003
Symposium, eds. L.Gurvits and S.Frey, (Baltic Astronomy
The new sample of giant radio sources III. Statistical trends and correlations
In this paper we analyse whether `giant' radio galaxies (GRGs) differ from
`normal'-size galaxies (NSGs) except for the linear extent of their radio
structure. We compare a number of properties of GRGs with the corresponding
properties of NSGs, and analyse the statistical trends and correlations of
physical parameters, homogeneously determined for the sources, with their
`fundamental' parameters. Using the Pearson partial-correlation test on the
correlation between two variables in the presence of one or two other
variables, we examine which correlation is the strongest. The analysis clearly
shows that GRGs do not form a separate class of radio sources. They most likely
evolve with time from smaller sources, however under specific circumstances.
Analysing properties of GRGs and NSGs together, we find that (i) the core
prominence does not correlate with the total radio luminosity (as does the core
power), but it anti-correlates with the surface brightness of the lobes of
sources, (ii) the energy density (and possibly the internal pressure) in the
lobes is independent of redshift for constant radio luminosity and size of the
sources, (iii) the equipartition magnetic-field strength, transformed into
constant source luminosity and redshift, strongly correlates with the source
size. We argue that this B_{eq} - D correlation reflects a more fundamental
correlation between B_{eq} and the source age, (iv) both the rotation and
depolarisation measures suggest Faraday screens local to the lobes of sources,
however their geometry and the composition of intervening material cannot be
determined from the global polarisation characteristics.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, 6 tables. Accepted for publication in A&
Giant Radio Sources in View of the Dynamical Evolution of FRII-type Population. I. The Observational Data, and Basic Physical Parameters of Sources Derived from the Analytical Model
The time evolution of giant lobe-dominated radio galaxies (with projected
linear size D>1 Mpc if H_{0}=50 km/s/Mpc and q_{0}=0.5 is analysed on the basis
of dynamical evolution of the entire FRII-type population. Two basic physical
parameters, namely the jet power Q_{0} and central density of the galaxy
nucleus rho0 are derived for a sample of giants with synchrotron ages reliably
determined, and compared with the relevant parameters in a comparison sample of
normal-size sources consisting of 3C, B2, and other sources. Having the
apparent radio luminosity P and linear size D of each sample source, Q_{0} and
rho_{0} are obtained by fitting the dynamical model of Kaiser et al. (1997). We
find that: (i) there is not a unique factor governing the source size; they are
old sources with temperate jet power (Q_{0}) evolved in a relatively
low-density environment (rho_{0}). The size is dependent, in order of
decreasing partial correlation coefficients, on age; then on Q_{0}; next on
rho_{0}. (ii) A self-similar expansion of the sources' cocoon seems to be
feasible if the power supplied by the jets is a few orders of magnitude above
the minimum-energy value. In other cases the expansion can only initially be
self-similar; a departure from self-similarity for large and old sources is
justified by observational data of giant sources. (iii) An apparent increase of
the lowest internal pressure value observed within the largest sources' cocoon
with redshift is obscured by the intrinsic dependence of their size on age and
the age on redshift, which hinders us from making definite conclusions about a
cosmological evolution of intergalactic medium (IGM) pressure.Comment: 36 pages, 8 figures, 7 table
Large-Scale Radio Structure in the Universe: Giant Radio Galaxies
Giant radio galaxies (GRGs), with linear sizes larger than 1 Mpc (H0=50
km/s/Mpc), represent the biggest single objects in the Universe. GRGs are rare
among the entire population of radio galaxies (RGs) and their physical
evolution is not well understood though for many years they have been of
special interest for several reasons. The lobes of radio sources can compress
cold gas clumps and trigger star or even dwarf galaxy formation, they can also
transport gas from a host galaxy to large distances and seed the IGM with
magnetic fields. Since GRGs have about 10 to 100 times larger sizes than normal
RGs, their influence on the ambient medium is correspondingly wider and is
pronounced on scales comparable to those of clusters of galaxies or larger.
Therefore `giants' could play an important role in the process of large-scale
structure formation in the Universe. Recently, thanks to the new all sky radio
surveys, significant progress in searching for new GRGs has been made.Comment: To appear in Multiwavelength AGN Surveys, ed. R. Maiolino and R.
Mujica, Singapore: World Scientific, 2004, 2 page
Observed Redshift Distributions and Cosmological Evolution of Radio Sources
It is shown that the new observed redshift distributions of various
flux-limited samples of radio sources in general are consistent with the
predictions of two basic evolutionary models published by Condon (1984) and
Dunlop and Peacock (1990), i.e. none of them can be rejected at the confidence
level of about 95 per cent. However, the models allowing a free-form evolution
and suggesting both density and luminosity evolution are more consistent with
the observational data at lower redshifts, while the 'pure luminosity
evolution' model fits better the data at higher redshifts. This leads to a
suspicion that the same evolution governing all radio sources, suggested by
Condon (1984), might not be the case.Comment: 4 pages including 2 Postscript figures, uses crckapb10.st
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