253 research outputs found
SS433's circumbinary ring and accretion disc viewed through its attenuating disc wind
We present optical spectroscopy of the microquasar SS433 covering a
significant fraction of a precessional cycle of its jet axis. The components of
the prominent stationary H-alpha and H-beta lines are mainly identified as
arising from three emitting regions: (i) a super-Eddington accretion disc wind,
in the form of a broad component accounting for most of the mass loss from the
system, (ii) a circumbinary disc of material that we presume is being excreted
through the binary's L2 point, and (iii) the accretion disc itself as two
remarkably persistent components. The accretion disc components move with a
Keplerian velocity of ~600 km/s in the outer region of the disc. A direct
result of this decomposition is the determination of the accretion disc size,
whose outer radius attains ~8 R_sun in the case of Keplerian orbits around a
black hole mass of 10 M_sun. We determine an upper limit for the accretion disc
inner to outer radius ratio in SS433, R_in/R_out ~ 0.2, independent of the mass
of the compact object. The Balmer decrements, H-alpha/H-beta, are extracted
from the appropriate stationary emission lines for each component of the
system. The physical parameters of the gaseous components are derived. The
circumbinary ring decrement seems to be quite constant throughout precessional
phase, implying a constant electron density of log N_e(cm^-3) ~ 11.5 for the
circumbinary disc. The accretion disc wind shows a larger change in its
decrements exhibiting a clear dependence on precessional phase, implying a
sinusoid variation in its electron density log N_e(cm^-3) along our
line-of-sight between 10 and 13. This dependence of density on direction
suggests that the accretion disc wind is polloidal in nature.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS Main Journal
Spectral ageing: a new age perspective
We present an up-to-date critique of the physical basis for the spectral
ageing method. We find that the number of cases where this method may be
meaningfully applied to deduce the ages of classical double radio sources is
small indeed. This critique is much more than merely a re-expression of
anxieties about the calibration of spectral ageing (which have been articulated
by others in the past).Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, published in `Particles & Fields in Radio
Galaxies', PASP, eds RA Laing & KM Blundel
The central engines of radio-quiet quasars
Two rival hypotheses have been proposed for the origin of the compact radio
flux observed in radio-quiet quasars (RQQs). It has been suggested that the
radio emission in these objects, typically some two or three orders of
magnitude less powerful than in radio-loud quasars (RLQs), represents either
emission from a circumnuclear starburst or is produced by radio jets with bulk
kinetic powers 10^3 times lower than those of RLQs with similar luminosity
ratios in other wavebands. We describe the results of high resolution
(parsec-scale) radio-imaging observations of a sample of 12 RQQs using the Very
Long Baseline Array (VLBA). We find strong evidence for jet-producing central
engines in 8 members of our sample.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Concepts in thermal physics
Stephen J. Blundell and Katherine M. Blundell.xviii, 493 p. : ill. ; 26 cm
Extremely red galaxy counterparts to 7C radio sources
We present RIJHK imaging of seven radio galaxies from the 7C Redshift Survey
(7CRS) which lack strong emission lines and we use these data to investigate
their spectral energy distributions (SEDs) with models which constrain their
redshifts. Six of these seven galaxies have extremely red colours (R-K>5.5) and
we find that almost all of them lie in the redshift range 1<z<2. We also
present near-infrared spectroscopy of these galaxies which demonstrate that
their SEDs are not dominated by emission lines, although tentative lines,
consistent with H-alpha at z=1.45 and z=1.61, are found in two objects.
Although the red colours of the 7CRS galaxies can formally be explained by
stellar populations which are either very old or young and heavily reddened,
independent evidence favours the former hypothesis. At z~1.5 at least 1/4 of
powerful radio jets are triggered in massive (>L*) galaxies which formed the
bulk of their stars several Gyr earlier, that is at epochs corresponding to
redshifts z>5. If a similar fraction of all z~1.5 radio galaxies are old, then
extrapolation of the radio luminosity function shows that, depending on the
radio source lifetimes, between 10-100% of the near-IR selected extremely red
object (ERO) population undergo a radio outburst at epochs corresponding to
1<z<2. An ERO found serendipitously in the field of one of the 7CRS radio
sources appears to be a radio-quiet analogue of the 7CRS EROs with an emission
line likely to be [OII] at z=1.20. The implication is that some of the most
massive elliptical galaxies formed the bulk of their stars at z>5 and these
objects probably undergo at least two periods of AGN activity: one at high
redshift during which the black hole forms and another one at an epoch
corresponding to z~1.5.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
On the origin of radio core emission in radio-quiet quasars
We present a model for the radio emission from radio-quiet quasar nuclei. We
show that a thermal origin for the high brightness temperature, flat spectrum
point sources (known as radio ``cores'') is possible provided the emitting
region is hot and optically-thin. We hence demonstrate that optically-thin
bremsstrahlung from a slow, dense disk wind can make a significant contribution
to the observed levels of radio core emission. This is a much more satisfactory
explanation, particularly for sources where there is no evidence of a jet, than
a sequence of self-absorbed synchrotron components which collectively conspire
to give a flat spectrum. Furthermore, such core phenomena are already observed
directly via milli-arcsecond radio imaging of the Galactic microquasar SS433
and the active galaxy NGC1068. We contend that radio-emitting disk winds must
be operating at some level in radio-loud quasars and radio galaxies as well
(although in these cases, observations of the radio cores are frequently
contaminated/dominated by synchrotron emission from jet knots). This
interpretation of radio core emission mandates mass accretion rates that are
substantially higher than Eddington. Moreover, acknowledgment of this mass-loss
mechanism as an AGN feedback process has important implications for the input
of energy and hot gas into the inter-galactic medium (IGM) since it is
considerably less directional than that from jets.Comment: to appear in ApJ Letters (4 pages
The Nature and Evolution of Classical Double Radio Sources from Complete Samples
We present a study of the trends in luminosity, linear size, spectral index,
and redshift of classical double radio sources from three complete samples
selected at successively fainter low radio-frequency flux-limits. We have been
able to decouple the effects of the tight correlation between redshift and
luminosity (inherent in any single flux-limited sample) which have hitherto
hindered interpretation of the relationships between these four source
properties. The major trends found are that (i) spectral indices increase with
linear size, (ii) rest-frame spectral indices have a stronger dependence on
luminosity than on redshift except at high (GHz) frequencies, and that (iii)
the linear sizes are smaller at higher redshifts. We reproduce the observed
dependences in a model for radio sources (born throughout cosmic time according
to a radio-source birth function) whose lobes are fed with a
synchrotron-emitting population (whose energy distribution is governed by
compact hotspots), and which suffer inverse Compton, synchrotron and adiabatic
expansion losses. In simulating the basic observed dependences, we find that
there is no need to invoke any systematic change in the environments of these
objects with redshift if the consequences of imposing a survey flux-limit on
our simulated datasets are properly included in the model. We present evidence
that for a radio survey there is an unavoidable `youth--redshift degeneracy',
even though radio sources are short-lived relative to the age of the Universe;
it is imperative to take this into account in studies which seemingly reveal
correlations of source properties with redshift such as the `alignment effect'.Comment: 48 pages, 19 figures, uses aas2pp4.sty. To appear in AJ. Also
available at http://www-astro.physics.ox.ac.uk/~kmb References updated and
minor typos correcte
Complex small-scale structure in the infrared extinction towards the Galactic Centre
A high level of complex structure, or ``granularity'', has been observed in
the distribution of infrared-obscuring material towards the Galactic Centre
(GC), with a characteristic scale of 5arcsec - 15arcsec, corresponding to 0.2 -
0.6pc at a GC distance of 8.5kpc. This structure has been observed in ISAAC
images which have a resolution of 0.6arcsec, significantly higher than that of
previous studies of the GC.
We have discovered granularity throughout the GC survey region, which covers
an area of 1.6deg x 0.8deg in longitude and latitude respectively (300pc x
120pc at 8.5kpc) centred on Sgr A*. This granularity is variable over the whole
region, with some areas exhibiting highly structured extinction in one or more
wavebands and other areas displaying no structure and a uniform stellar
distribution in all wavebands. The granularity does not appear to correspond to
longitude, latitude or radial distance from Sgr A*. We find that regions
exhibiting high granularity are strongly associated with high stellar
reddening.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
Evidence that particle acceleration in hotspots of FR II galaxies is not constrained by synchrotron cooling
We study the hotspots of powerful radiogalaxies, where electrons accelerated
at the jet termination shock emit synchrotron radiation. The turnover of the
synchrotron spectrum is typically observed between infrared and optical
frequencies, indicating that the maximum energy of non-thermal electrons
accelerated at the shock is ~TeV for a canonical magnetic field of ~100 micro
Gauss. We show that this maximum energy cannot be constrained by synchrotron
losses as usually assumed, unless the jet density is unreasonably large and
most of the jet upstream energy goes to non-thermal particles. We test this
result by considering a sample of hotspots observed at radio, infrared and
optical wavelengths.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures. To be appear in the proceedings of the conference
"Cosmic ray origin - beyond the standard models" (San Vito di Cadore, Italy,
September 2016
Particle acceleration and magnetic field amplification in the jets of 4C74.26
We model the multi-wavelength emission in the southern hotspot of the radio
quasar 4C74.26. The synchrotron radio emission is resolved near the shock with
the MERLIN radio-interferometer, and the rapid decay of this emission behind
the shock is interpreted as the decay of the amplified downstream magnetic
field as expected for small scale turbulence. Electrons are accelerated to only
0.3 TeV, consistent with a diffusion coefficient many orders of magnitude
greater than in the Bohm regime. If the same diffusion coefficient applies to
the protons, their maximum energy is only ~100 TeV.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. 6 pages - 2 figures. Minor
correction
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