5,168 research outputs found
VLA Polarimetry of Two Extended Radio Galaxies
Multi-wavelength VLA observations of two extended radio galaxies, 0235-197
and 1203+043 are presented. There is some evidence from earlier studies that
these two sources exhibit low frequency (<1 GHz) variability. This work shows
that both sources have linear polarizations, if any, below the detection limits
at 320 MHz, so we cannot explain the variability as being due to instrumental
polarization effects as has been suggested for 3C159. Refractive scintillation
may be the cause of the variability in 0235-197. This would require the
existence of a bright, compact component in one of the hot spots seen in these
observations. This is not implausible but the resolution of this observational
program is insufficent to address that question. The radio source 1203+043
lacks any bright compact component thereby ruling out a refractive
scintillation mechanism for its variability. Consequently, it is possible that
claims of variability in this source are spurious. However, the 320 MHz VLA
observations show that 1203+043 has an `X'-shaped radio structure. This is a
rare morphology for the brightness distribution of a radio galaxy; the
implications of this are examined.Comment: 8 pages, plain tex, accepted by Astronomy and Astrophysics,
Supplement Serie
On the population of remnant FRII radio galaxies and implications for radio source dynamics
The purpose of this work is two-fold: (1) to quantify the occurrence of
ultra-steep spectrum remnant FRII radio galaxies in a 74 MHz flux limited
sample, and (2) perform Monte-Carlo simulations of the population of active and
remnant FRII radio galaxies to confront models of remnant lobe evolution, and
provide guidance for further investigation of remnant radio galaxies. We find
that fewer than 2 of FRII radio galaxies with S Jy are
candidate ultra-steep spectrum remnants, where we define ultra-steep spectrum
as . Our Monte-Carlo simulations
demonstrate that models involving Sedov-like expansion in the remnant phase,
resulting in rapid adiabatic energy losses, are consistent with this upper
limit, and predict the existence of nearly twice as many remnants with normal
(not ultra-steep) spectra in the observed frequency range as there are
ultra-steep spectrum remnants. This model also predicts an ultra-steep remnant
fraction approaching 10 at redshifts . Importantly, this model
implies the lobes remain over-pressured with respect to the ambient medium well
after their active lifetime, in contrast with existing observational evidence
that many FRII radio galaxy lobes reach pressure equilibrium with the external
medium whilst still in the active phase. The predicted age distribution of
remnants is a steeply decreasing function of age. In other words young remnants
are expected to be much more common than old remnants in flux limited samples.
For this reason, incorporating higher frequency data GHz will be of
great benefit to future studies of the remnant population.Comment: 19 pages, 8 figures, 4 table
IC5063: AGN driven outflow of warm and cold gas
We present new ATCA 17- and 24-GHz radio images and ESO-NTT optical spectra
of the radio-loud Seyfert galaxy IC5063, the first galaxy in which a fast (~
600 km/s) outflow of neutral hydrogen was discovered. The new radio data
confirm the triple radio structure with a central core and two resolved radio
lobes. This implies that the previously detected fast outflow of neutral gas is
occurring off-nucleus, near a radio lobe about 0.5 kpc from the core. The
ionised gas shows complex kinematics in the region co-spatial with the radio
emission. Broad and blueshifted (~ 500 km/s) emission is observed in the region
of the radio lobe, at the same location as the blueshifted HI absorption. The
velocity of the ionised outflow is similar to the one found in HI. The first
order correspondence between the radio and optical properties suggests that the
outflow is driven by the interaction between the radio jet and the ISM. Despite
the high outflow velocities, no evidence is found for the ionisation of the gas
being due to fast shocks in the region of the outflow, indicating that
photoionisation from the AGN is likely to be the dominant ionisation mechanism.
The outflow rate of the warm (ionised) gas is small compared to that of the
cold gas. The mass outflow rate associated with the HI is in the same range as
for ``mild'' starburst-driven superwinds in ULIRGs. However, in IC5063, the
AGN-driven outflow appears to be limited to the inner kpc region of the galaxy.
The kinetic power associated with the HI outflow is a small fraction (a few x
10^-4) of the Eddington luminosity of the galaxy but is a significant fraction
(~ 0.1) of the nuclear bolometric luminosity. In IC5063, the outflows may have
sufficient kinetic power to have a significant impact on the evolution of the
ISM in the host galaxy.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A, 11 pages, 8 figure
BeppoSAX observations of low power radio galaxies: possible detection of obscured nuclei
We present the first results of BeppoSAX observations of a small sample of
low brightness FRI radio galaxies. The flux of all the targets is consistent
with a thermal spectrum, as due to the presence of hot intracluster gas or
galactic corona. Moreover in three sources a non thermal absorbed spectrum can
be present in the MECS spectrum at energies larger than 7 keV, while for a
fourth object a high energy flux has been detected in the PDS instrument at
energies larger than 15 keV. This component could be related to the inner AGN
surrounded by an obscuring torus.Comment: 4 pages, LateX, 3 figures (included). Uses espcrc2.sty (included). To
appear in: "The Active X-ray Sky: Results from BeppoSAX and Rossi-XTE", Rome,
Italy, 21-24 October, 1997, Eds.: L. Scarsi, H. Bradt, P. Giommi and F. Fior
Method for evaluating the durability of aircraft piston engines
A significant issue in aircraft engines is quantifying residual life to overhaul. The algorithm described in this paper calculates with a good level of reliability the residual life of a petrol piston engine. The method was tested on small, latest-generation, naturally-aspirated aircraft and racing piston engines, and has been effective in several experiments. This method is implemented directly on the electronic control system of the engine with very few lines of C-code. The method can also be used in many industrial engines. This innovative method assumes that only two main factors (power level and wear) affect engine durability or time between overhauls. These two factors are considered as separate and combined with worst case criteria. The wear is assumed to follow a logarithmic law and a formula similar to the Miner’s law for material fatigue is used, making it possible to calculate the power-level curve with knowledge of only two points. The wear-curve is also related to elapsed engine cycles. The algorithm is very simple and can be implemented with just a few lines of software code accessing data collected from existing sensors. The system is currently used to evaluate actual residual life of racing engines
VLA Images of Two Extended Radio Galaxies
There is some evidence from earlier studies that the two sources 0235 — 197 and 1203 + 043 exhibit low frequency (< 1 GHz) variability. This work shows that both sources have linear polarizations, if any, below the detection limits at 320 MHz, so we cannot explain the variability as being due to instrumental polarization effects as has been suggested for 3C159. Refractive scintillation may be the cause of the variability in 0235—197. The radio source 1203+043 lacks any bright compact component thereby ruling out a refractive scintillation mechanism for its variability. Consequently, it is possible that claims of variability in this source are spurious. However, the 320 MHz VLA observations show that 1203+043 has an 'X'-shaped radio structure
A circumnuclear disk of atomic hydrogen in Centaurus A
We present new observations, performed with the Australia Telescope Compact
Array, of the HI absorption in the central regions of Centaurus A. For the
first time, absorption is detected against the radio core at velocities
blueshifted with respect to the systemic velocity. Moreover, the data show that
the nuclear redshifted absorption component is broader than reported before.
With these new results, the kinematics of the HI in the inner regions of Cen A
appears very similar to that observed in emission for the molecular
circumnuclear disk. This suggests that the central HI absorption is not, as was
previously claimed, evidence of gas infall into the AGN, but instead is due to
a cold, circumnuclear disk.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A Letter, 4 pages, 2 figure
LOFAR observations of 4C+19.44. On the discovery of low frequency spectral curvature in relativistic jet knots
We present the first LOFAR observations of the radio jet in the quasar
4C+19.44 (a.k.a. PKS 1354+19) obtained with the long baselines. The achieved
resolution is very well matched to that of archival Jansky Very Large Array
(JVLA) observations at higher radio frequencies as well as the archival X-ray
images obtained with {\it Chandra}. We found that, for several knots along the
jet, the radio flux densities measured at hundreds of MHz lie well below the
values estimated by extrapolating the GHz spectra. This clearly indicates the
presence of spectral curvature. Radio spectral curvature has been already
observed in different source classes and/or extended radio structures and it
has been often interpreted as due to intrinsic processes, as a curved particle
energy distribution, rather than absorption mechanisms ({ Razin-Tsytovich}
effect, free-free or synchrotron self absorption to name a few). Here we
discuss our results according to the scenario where particles undergo
stochastic acceleration mechanisms also in quasar jet knots.Comment: 13 pages, 4 tables, 4 figures, pre-proof version, published on the
Astrophysical Journal (Harris, et al. 2019 ApJ, 873, 21
Chandra Observation of the Cluster Environment of a WAT Radio Source in Abell 1446
Wide-angle tail (WAT) radio sources are often found in the centers of galaxy
clusters where intracluster medium (ICM) ram pressure may bend the lobes into
their characteristic C-shape. We examine the low redshift (z=0.1035) cluster
Abell 1446, host to the WAT radio source 1159+583. The cluster exhibits
possible evidence for a small-scale cluster-subcluster merger as a cause of the
WAT radio source morphology. This evidence includes the presence of temperature
and pressure substructure along the line that bisects the WAT as well as a
possible wake of stripped interstellar material or a disrupted cool core to the
southeast of the host galaxy. A filament to the north may represent cool,
infalling gas that's contributing to the WAT bending while spectroscopically
determined redshifts of member galaxies may indicate some component of a merger
occurring along the line-of-sight. The WAT model of high flow velocity and low
lobe density is examined as another scenario for the bending of 1159+583. It
has been argued that such a model would allow the ram pressure due to the
galaxy's slow motion through the ICM to shape the WAT source. A temperature
profile shows that the cluster is isothermal (kT= 4.0 keV) in a series of
annuli reaching a radius of 400 kpc. There is no evidence of an ongoing cooling
flow. Temperature, abundance, pressure, density, and mass profiles, as well as
two-dimensional maps of temperature and pressure are presented.Comment: 40 AASTeX pages including 15 postscript figures; accepted for
publication in Ap
The old and heavy bulge of M31 I. Kinematics and stellar populations
We present new optical long-slit data along 6 position angles of the bulge
region of M31. We derive accurate stellar and gas kinematics reaching 5 arcmin
from the center, where the disk light contribution is always less than 30%, and
out to 8 arcmin along the major axis, where the disk makes 55% of the total
light. We show that the velocity dispersions of McElroy (1983) are severely
underestimated (by up to 50 km/s) and previous dynamical models have
underestimated the stellar mass of M31's bulge by a factor 2. Moreover, the
light-weighted velocity dispersion of the galaxy grows to 166 km/s, thus
reducing the discrepancy between the predicted and measured mass of the black
hole at the center of M31. The kinematic position angle varies with distance,
pointing to triaxiality. We detect gas counterrotation near the bulge minor
axis. We measure eight emission-corrected Lick indices. They are approximately
constant on circles. We derive the age, metallicity and alpha-element
overabundance profiles. Except for the region in the inner arcsecs of the
galaxy, the bulge of M31 is uniformly old (>12 Gyr, with many best-fit ages at
the model grid limit of 15 Gyr), slightly alpha-elements overabundant
([alpha/Fe]~0.2) and at solar metallicity, in agreement with studies of the
resolved stellar components. The predicted u-g, g-r and r-i Sloan color
profiles match reasonably well the dust-corrected observations. The stellar
populations have approximately radially constant mass-to-light ratios (M/L_R ~
4-4.5 for a Kroupa IMF), in agreement with stellar dynamical estimates based on
our new velocity dispersions. In the inner arcsecs the luminosity-weighted age
drops to 4-8 Gyr, while the metallicity increases to above 3 times the solar
value.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
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