1,787 research outputs found
A study of the angular size-redshift relation for models in which decays as the energy density
By modifying the Chen and Wu ansatz, we have investigated some Friedmann
models in which varies as . In order to test the consistency of
the models with observations, we study the angular size - redshift relation for
256 ultracompact radio sources selected by Jackson and Dodgson. The angular
sizes of these sources were determined by using very long-baseline
interferometry in order to avoid any evolutionary effects. The models fit the
data very well and require an accelerating universe with a positive
cosmological constant. Open, flat and closed models are almost equally
probable, though the open model provides a comparatively better fit to the
data. The models are found to have intermediate density and imply the existence
of dark matter, though not as much as in the canonical Einstein-de Sitter
model.Comment: LaTex, 15 pages including 2 figures (Revised version appeared in CQG
Doppler Boosting, Superluminal Motion, and the Kinematics of AGN Jets
We discuss results from a decade long program to study the fine-scale
structure and the kinematics of relativistic AGN jets with the aim of better
understanding the acceleration and collimation of the relativistic plasma
forming AGN jets. From the observed distribution of brightness temperature,
apparent velocity, flux density, time variability, and apparent luminosity, the
intrinsic properties of the jets including Lorentz factor, luminosity,
orientation, and brightness temperature are discussed. Special attention is
given to the jet in M87, which has been studied over a wide range of
wavelengths and which, due to its proximity, is observed with excellent spatial
resolution.
Most radio jets appear quite linear, but we also observe curved non-linear
jets and non-radial motions. Sometimes, different features in a given jet
appear to follow the same curved path but there is evidence for ballistic
trajectories as well. The data are best fit with a distribution of Lorentz
factors extending up to gamma ~30 and intrinsic luminosity up to ~10^26 W/Hz.
In general, gamma-ray quasars may have somewhat larger Lorentz factors than non
gamma-ray quasars. Initially the observed brightness temperature near the base
of the jet extend up to ~5x10^13 K which is well in excess of the inverse
Compton limit and corresponds to a large excess of particle energy over
magnetic energy. However, more typically, the observed brightness temperatures
are ~2x10^11 K, i.e., closer to equipartition.Comment: 10 pages, 12 color figures; proceedings of the 5th Stromlo Symposium:
Disks, Winds, and Jets - from Planets to Quasars; accepted in Astrophysics &
Space Scienc
MOJAVE: monitoring of jets in active galactic nuclei with VLBA experiments. V. Multi-epoch VLBA images
We present images from a long-term program (MOJAVE: Monitoring of Jets in active galactic nuclei (AGNs) with VLBA Experiments) to survey the structure and evolution of parsec-scale jet phenomena associated with bright radio-loud active galaxies in the northern sky. The observations consist of 2424 15 GHz Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) images of a complete flux-density-limited sample of 135 AGNs above declination â20°, spanning the period 1994 August to 2007 September. These data were acquired as part of the MOJAVE and 2 cm Survey programs, and from the VLBA archive. The sample-selection criteria are based on multi-epoch parsec-scale (VLBA) flux density, and heavily favor highly variable and compact blazars. The sample includes nearly all the most prominent blazars in the northern sky, and is well suited for statistical analysis and comparison with studies at other wavelengths. Our multi-epoch and stacked-epoch images show 94% of the sample to have apparent one-sided jet morphologies, most likely due to the effects of relativistic beaming. Of the remaining sources, five have two-sided parsec-scale jets, and three are effectively unresolved by the VLBA at 15 GHz, with essentially all of the flux density contained within a few tenths of a milliarcsecond
Helical motion and the origin of QPO in blazar-type sources
Recent observations and analysis of blazar sources provide strong evidence
for (i) the presence of significant periodicities in their lightcurves and (ii)
the occurrence of helical trajectories in their radio jets. In scenarios, where
the periodicity is caused by differential Doppler boosting effects along a
helical jet path, both of these facts may be naturally tied together. Here we
discuss four possible driving mechanisms for the occurrence of helical
trajectories: orbital motion in a binary system, Newtonian-driven jet
precession, internal jet rotation and motion along a global helical magnetic
field. We point out that for non-ballistic helical motion the observed period
may appear strongly shortened due to classical travel time effects. Finally,
the possible relevance of the above mentioned driving mechanisms is discussed
for Mkn~501, OJ 287 and AO 0235+16.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure; presented at the 5th Microquasar Workshop,
Beijing, June 2004. Accepted for publication in the Chinese Journal of
Astronomy and Astrophysic
Magnetic Fields in Quasar Cores II
Multi-frequency polarimetry with the Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA)
telescope has revealed absolute Faraday Rotation Measures (RMs) in excess of
1000 rad/m/m in the central regions of 7 out of 8 strong quasars studied (e.g.,
3C 273, 3C 279, 3C 395). Beyond a projected distance of ~20 pc, however, the
jets are found to have |RM| < 100 rad/m/m. Such sharp RM gradients cannot be
produced by cluster or galactic-scale magnetic fields, but rather must be the
result of magnetic fields organized over the central 1-100 pc. The RMs of the
sources studied to date and the polarization properties of BL Lacs, quasars and
galaxies are shown to be consistent so far with the predictions of unified
schemes. The direct detection of high RMs in these quasar cores can explain the
low fractional core polarizations usually observed in quasars at centimeter
wavelengths as the result of irregularities in the Faraday screen on scales
smaller than the telescope beam. Variability in the RM of the core is reported
for 3C 279 between observations taken 1.5 years apart, indicating that the
Faraday screen changes on that timescale, or that the projected superluminal
motion of the inner jet components samples a new location in the screen with
time. Either way, these changes in the Faraday screen may explain the dramatic
variability in core polarization properties displayed by quasars.Comment: Accepted to the ApJ. 27 pages, 9 figures including figure 6 in colo
VLBI and Single Dish Monitoring of 3C84 in the Period of 2009-2011
The radio galaxy 3C 84 is a representative of gamma-ray-bright misaligned
active galactic nuclei (AGNs) and one of the best laboratories to study the
radio properties of the sub-pc jet in connection with the gamma-ray emission.
In order to identify possible radio counterparts of the gamma-ray emissions in
3C 84, we study the change in structure within the central 1 pc and the light
curve of sub-pc-size components C1, C2, and C3. We search for any correlation
between changes in the radio components and the gamma-ray flares by making use
of VLBI and single dish data. Throughout the radio monitoring spanning over two
GeV gamma-ray flares detected by the {\it Fermi}-LAT and the MAGIC Cherenkov
Telescope in the periods of 2009 April to May and 2010 June to August, total
flux density in radio band increases on average. This flux increase mostly
originates in C3. Although the gamma-ray flares span on the timescale of days
to weeks, no clear correlation with the radio light curve on this timescale is
found. Any new prominent components and change in morphology associated with
the gamma-ray flares are not found on the VLBI images.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS lette
The nucleotide and partial amino acid sequences of rat fetuin
Fetuins are among the major plasma proteins, yet their biological role has remained elusive. Here we report the molecular cloning of rat fetuin and the sequence analysis of a full-length clone, RF619 of 1456 bp with an open reading frame of 1056 bp encoding 352 amino acid residues. The coding part of RF619 was identical with the cDNA sequence of the natural inhibitor of the insulin receptor tyrosine kinase from rat (pp63) except for four substitutions and a single base insertion causing divergence of the predicted protein sequences. Partial amino acid sequences of rat plasma fetuin were in agreement with the predictions based on the RF619 cDNA. Purified rat fetuin inhibited the insulin receptor tyrosine kinase in vitro. Therefore, we conclude that RF619 and pp63 cDNA encode the same protein, i.e. authentic rat fetuin which is a functional tyrosine kinase inhibitor
Spectroscopic follow-up of variability-selected active galactic nuclei in the Chandra Deep Field South
Luminous AGNs are usually selected by their non-stellar colours or their
X-ray emission. Colour selection cannot be used to select low-luminosity AGNs,
since their emission is dominated by the host galaxy. Objects with low X-ray to
optical ratio escape even the deepest X-ray surveys performed so far. In a
previous study we presented a sample of candidates selected through optical
variability in the Chandra Deep Field South, where repeated optical
observations were performed for the STRESS supernova survey. We obtained new
optical spectroscopy for a sample of variability selected candidates with the
ESO NTT telescope. We analysed the new spectra, together with those existing in
the literature and studied the distribution of the objects in U-B and B-V
colours, optical and X-ray luminosity, and variability amplitude. A large
fraction (17/27) of the observed candidates are broad-line luminous AGNs,
confirming the efficiency of variability in detecting quasars. We detect: i)
extended objects which would have escaped the colour selection and ii) objects
of very low X-ray to optical ratio. Several objects resulted to be
narrow-emission line galaxies where variability indicates nuclear activity,
while no emission lines were detected in others. Some of these galaxies have
variability and X-ray to optical ratio close to active galactic nuclei, while
others have much lower variability and X-ray to optical ratio. This result can
be explained by the dilution of the nuclear light due to the host galaxy. Our
results demonstrate the effectiveness of supernova search programmes to detect
large samples of low-luminosity AGNs. A sizable fraction of the AGN in our
variability sample had escaped X-ray detection (5/47) and/or colour selection
(9/48). Spectroscopic follow-up to fainter flux limits is strongly encouraged.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures, to appear in A&
On-axis spectroscopy of the z=0.144 radio-loud quasar HE 1434-1600: an elliptical host with a highly ionized ISM
VLT on-axis optical spectroscopy of the z=0.144 radio-loud quasar HE
1434-1600 is presented. The spatially resolved spectra of the host galaxy are
deconvolved and separated from those of the central quasar in order to study
the dynamics of the stars and gas as well as the physical conditions of the
ISM. We find that the host of HE 1434-1600 is an elliptical galaxy that resides
in a group of at least 5 member galaxies, and that most likely experienced a
recent collision with its nearest companion. Compared with other quasar host
galaxies, HE 1434-1600 has a highly ionized ISM. The ionization state
corresponds to that of typical Seyferts, but the ionized regions are not
distributed in a homogeneous way around the QSO, and are located preferentially
several kiloparsecs away from it. While the stellar absorption lines do not
show any significant velocity field, the gas emission lines do. The observed
gas velocity field is hard to reconcile with dynamical models involving
rotating disk, modified Hubble laws or power laws, that all require extreme
central masses (M > 10^9 M_sun) to provide only poor fit to the data. Power law
models, which best fit the data, provide a total mass of M(< 10 kpc)=9.2 10^10
M_sun. We conclude that the recent interaction between HE 1434-1600 and its
closest companion has strongly affected the gas velocity and ionization state,
from the center of the galaxy to its most external parts.Comment: 11 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Disentangling the circumnuclear environs of Centaurus A: II. On the nature of the broad absorption line
We report on atomic gas (HI) and molecular gas (as traced by CO(2-1))
redshifted absorption features toward the nuclear regions of the closest
powerful radio galaxy, Centaurus A (NGC 5128). Our HI observations using the
Very Long Baseline Array allow us to discern with unprecedented sub-parsec
resolution HI absorption profiles toward different positions along the 21 cm
continuum jet emission in the inner 0."3 (or 5.4 pc). In addition, our CO(2-1)
data obtained with the Submillimeter Array probe the bulk of the absorbing
molecular gas with little contamination by emission, not possible with previous
CO single-dish observations. We shed light with these data on the physical
properties of the gas in the line of sight, emphasizing the still open debate
about the nature of the gas that produces the broad absorption line (~55 km/s).
First, the broad H I line is more prominent toward the central and brightest 21
cm continuum component than toward a region along the jet at a distance ~ 20
mas (or 0.4 pc) further from it. This suggests that the broad absorption line
arises from gas located close to the nucleus, rather than from diffuse and more
distant gas. Second, the different velocity components detected in the CO(2-1)
absorption spectrum match well other molecular lines, such as those of
HCO+(1-0), except the broad absorption line that is detected in HCO+(1-0) (and
most likely related to that of the H I). Dissociation of molecular hydrogen due
to the AGN seems to be efficient at distances <= 10 pc, which might contribute
to the depth of the broad H I and molecular lines.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
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