3,763 research outputs found
Flux density measurements of a complete sample of faint blazars
We performed observations with the Effelsberg 100-m radio telescope to
measure flux densities and polarised emission of sources selected from the
"Deep X-ray Radio Blazar Survey" (DXRBS) to better define their spectral index
behaviour in the radio band, with the aim to construct a homogeneous sample of
blazars. Sources were observed at four different frequencies with the
Effelsberg 100-m telescope. We complemented these measurements with flux
density data at 1.4GHz derived from the NRAO VLA Sky Survey.The spectral
indices of a sample of faint blazars were computed making use of almost
simultaneous measurements. Sixty-six percent of the sources can be classified
as "bona fide" blazars. Seven objects show a clearly inverted spectral index.
Seventeen sources previously classified as flat spectrum radio quasars (FSRQs)
are actually steep spectrum radio quasars (SSRQs). The flux densities obtained
with the Effelsberg 100-m telescope at 5GHz are compared with the flux
densities listed in the Green Bank GB6 survey and in the Parkes-MIT-NRAO PMN
catalogue. About 43% of the sources in our sample exhibit flux density
variations on temporal scales of 19 or 22 years. We confirm that 75 out of 103
sources of the DXRBS are indeed FSRQs. Twenty-seven sources show a spectral
index steeper than -0.5 and should be classified as SSRQs. Polarised emission
was detected for 36 sources at 4.85GHz. The median value of the percentage of
polarised emission is (5.8+-0.9$)%. Five sources show rotation measure (RM)
values >200 rad m^-2.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysic
Critical view of WKB decay widths
A detailed comparison of the expressions for the decay widths obtained within
the semiclassical WKB approximation using different approaches to the tunneling
problem is performed. The differences between the available improved formulae
for tunneling near the top and the bottom of the barrier are investigated.
Though the simple WKB method gives the right order of magnitude of the decay
widths, a small number of parameters are often fitted. The need to perform the
fitting procedure remaining consistently within the WKB framework is emphasized
in the context of the fission model based calculations. Calculations for the
decay widths of some recently found super heavy nuclei using microscopic
alpha-nucleus potentials are presented to demonstrate the importance of a
consistent WKB calculation. The half-lives are found to be sensitive to the
density dependence of the nucleon-nucleon interaction and the implementation of
the Bohr-Sommerfeld quantization condition inherent in the WKB approach.Comment: 18 pages, Late
Spectrum of two component flows around a super-massive black hole: an application to M87
We calculate the spectra of two-component accretion flows around black holes
of various masses, from quasars to nano-quasars. Specifically, we fit the
observational data of M87 very satisfactorily using our model and find that the
spectrum may be well fitted by a sub-Keplerian component alone, and there is
little need of any Keplerian component. The non-thermal distribution of
electrons produced by their acceleration across the standing shock in the
sub-Keplerian component is enough to produce the observed flat spectrum through
the synchrotron radiation.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures and 1 table. Accepted in Astrophysical Journal
Lette
The X-ray Emissions from the M87 Jet: Diagnostics and Physical Interpretation
We reanalyze the deep Chandra observations of the M87 jet, first examined by
Wilson & Yang (2002). By employing an analysis chain that includes image
deconvolution, knots HST-1 and I are fully separated from adjacent emission. We
find slight but significant variations in the spectral shape, with values of
ranging from . We use VLA radio observations, as well
as HST imaging and polarimetry data, to examine the jet's broad-band spectrum
and inquire as to the nature of particle acceleration in the jet. As shown in
previous papers, a simple continuous injection model for synchrotron-emitting
knots, in which both the filling factor, , of regions within which
particles are accelerated and the energy spectrum of the injected particles are
constant, cannot account for the X-ray flux or spectrum. Instead, we propose
that is a function of position and energy and find that in the inner
jet, , and
in knots A and B, , where is the emitted photon energy and and is the
emitting electron energy. In this model, the index of the injected electron
energy spectrum () is at all locations in
the jet, as predicted by models of cosmic ray acceleration by ultrarelativistic
shocks. There is a strong correlation between the peaks of X-ray emission and
minima of optical percentage polarization, i.e., regions where the jet magnetic
field is not ordered. We suggest that the X-ray peaks coincide with shock waves
which accelerate the X-ray emitting electrons and cause changes in the
direction of the magnetic field; the polarization is thus small because of beam
averaging.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ; 21 pages, 9 figures, 2 tables;
abstract shortened for astro-ph; Figures 1, 7 and 8 at reduced resolutio
The radio-ultraviolet spectral energy distribution of the jet in 3C273
We present deep VLA and HST observations of the large-scale jet in 3C 273
matched to 0.3" resolution. The observed spectra show a significant flattening
in the infrared-ultraviolet wavelength range. The jet's emission cannot
therefore be assumed to arise from a single electron population and requires
the presence of an additional emission component. The observed smooth
variations of the spectral indices along the jet imply that the physical
conditions vary correspondingly smoothly. We determine the maximum particle
energy for the optical jet using synchrotron spectral fits. The slow decline of
the maximum energy along the jet implies particle reacceleration acting along
the entire jet. In addition to the already established global anti-correlation
between maximum particle energy and surface brightness, we find a weak positive
correlation between small-scale variations in maximum particle energy and
surface brightness. The origin of these conflicting global and local
correlations is unclear, but they provide tight constraints for reacceleration
models.Comment: 28 pages, lots of figures, accepted for publication in A&
X-ray Emission Properties of Large Scale Jets, Hotspots and Lobes in Active Galactic Nuclei
We examine a systematic comparison of jet-knots, hotspots and radio lobes
recently observed with Chandra and ASCA. This report will discuss the origin of
their X-ray emissions and investigate the dynamics of the jets. The data was
compiled at well sampled radio (5GHz) and X-ray frequencies (1keV) for more
than 40 radio galaxies. We examined three models for the X-ray production:
synchrotron (SYN), synchrotron self-Compton (SSC) and external Compton on CMB
photons (EC). For the SYN sources -- mostly jet-knots in nearby low-luminosity
radio galaxies -- X-ray photons are produced by ultrarelativistic electrons
with energies 10-100 TeV that must be accelerated in situ. For the other
objects, conservatively classified as SSC or EC sources, a simple formulation
of calculating the ``expected'' X-ray fluxes under an equipartition hypothesis
is presented. We confirmed that the observed X-ray fluxes are close to the
expected ones for non-relativistic emitting plasma velocities in the case of
radio lobes and majority of hotspots, whereas considerable fraction of
jet-knots is too bright at X-rays to be explained in this way. We examined two
possibilities to account for the discrepancy in a framework of the
inverse-Compton model: (1) magnetic field is much smaller than the
equipartition value, and (2) the jets are highly relativistic on kpc/Mpc
scales. We concluded, that if the inverse-Compton model is the case, the X-ray
bright jet-knots are most likely far from the minimum-power condition. We also
briefly discuss the other possibility, namely that the observed X-ray emission
from all of the jet-knots is synchrotron in origin.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journal, vol.62
A multi-zone model for simulating the high energy variability of TeV blazars
We present a time-dependent multi-zone code for simulating the variability of
Synchrotron-Self Compton (SSC) sources. The code adopts a multi-zone pipe
geometry for the emission region, appropriate for simulating emission from a
standing or propagating shock in a collimated jet. Variations in the injection
of relativistic electrons in the inlet propagate along the length of the pipe
cooling radiatively. Our code for the first time takes into account the
non-local, time-retarded nature of synchrotron self-Compton (SSC) losses that
are thought to be dominant in TeV blazars. The observed synchrotron and SSC
emission is followed self-consistently taking into account light travel time
delays. At any given time, the emitting portion of the pipe depends on the
frequency and the nature of the variation followed. Our simulation employs only
one additional physical parameter relative to one-zone models, that of the pipe
length and is computationally very efficient, using simplified expressions for
the SSC processes. The code will be useful for observers modeling GLAST, TeV,
and X-ray observations of SSC blazars.Comment: ApJ, accepte
Polarization of synchrotron emission from relativistic reconfinement shocks with ordered magnetic fields
We calculate the polarization of synchrotron radiation produced at the
relativistic reconfinement shocks, taking into account globally ordered
magnetic field components, in particular toroidal and helical fields. In these
shocks, toroidal fields produce high parallel polarization (electric vectors
parallel to the projected jet axis), while chaotic fields generate moderate
perpendicular polarization. Helical fields result in a non-axisymmetric
distribution of the total and polarized brightness. For a diverging downstream
velocity field, the Stokes parameter U does not vanish and the average
polarization is neither strictly parallel nor perpendicular. A distance at
which the downstream flow is changing from diverging to converging can be
easily identified on polarization maps as the turning point, at which
polarization vectors switch, e.g., from clockwise to counterclockwise.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Probing the origin of VHE emission from M 87 with MWL observations in 2010
The large majority of extragalactic very high energy (VHE; E>100 GeV) sources
belongs to the class of active galactic nuclei (AGN), in particular the BL Lac
sub-class. AGNs are characterized by an extremely bright and compact emission
region, powered by a super-massive black hole (SMBH) and an accretion disk, and
relativistic outflows (jets) detected all across the electro-magnetic spectrum.
In BL Lac sources the jet axis is oriented close to the line of sight, giving
rise to a relativistic boosting of the emission. In radio galaxies, on the
other hand, the jet makes a larger angle to the line of sight allowing to
resolve the central core and the jet in great details. The giant radio galaxy M
87 with its proximity (1 6Mpc) and its very massive black hole ((3-6) x 10^9
M_solar) provides a unique laboratory to investigate VHE emission in such
objects and thereby probe particle acceleration to relativistic energies near
SMBH and in jets. M 87 has been established as a VHE emitter since 2005. The
VHE emission displays strong variability on time-scales as short as a day. It
has been subject of a large joint VHE and multi-wavelength (MWL) monitoring
campaign in 2008, where a rise in the 43 GHz VLBA radio emission of the
innermost region (core) was found to coincide with a flaring activity at VHE.
This had been interpreted as a strong indication that the VHE emission is
produced in the direct vicinity of the SMBH black hole. In 2010 again a flare
at VHE was detected triggering further MWL observations with the VLBA, Chandra,
and other instruments. At the same time M 87 was also observed with the
Fermi-LAT telescope at GeV energies and the European VLBI Network (EVN). In
this contribution preliminary results from the campaign will be presented.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, in the proceedings of the "International Workshop
on Beamed and Unbeamed Gamma-Rays from Galaxies" 11-15 April 2011, Lapland
Hotel Olos, Muonio, Finland, Journal of Physics: Conference Series Volume
355, 201
Variability of the extreme z=4.72 blazar, GB 1428+4217
We report X-ray and radio variability of GB 1428+4217 which confirm its
blazar nature. IR observations reveal a powerful optical-UV component, not
obscured by dust, which is suggestive of the presence of a billion solar mass
black hole, already formed by z ~ 5. A detailed comparison of the broad band
spectral properties of GB 1428+4217 with those of nearby blazars shows it to be
extreme, but nevertheless consistent with the trend found for nearby sources.Comment: MNRAS, in press - 5 pages, 5 figure
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