947 research outputs found
The jet-disc connection in AGN
We present our latest results on the connection between accretion rate and
relativistic jet power in AGN, by using a large sample which includes mostly
blazars, but contains also some radio--galaxies. The jet power can be traced by
--ray luminosity in the case of blazars, and radio luminosity for both
classes. The accretion disc luminosity is instead traced by the broad emission
lines. Among blazars, we find a correlation between broad line emission and the
--ray or radio luminosities, suggesting a direct tight connection
between jet power and accretion rate. We confirm that the observational
differences between blazar subclasses reflect differences in the accretion
regime, but with blazars only we cannot properly access the low--accretion
regime. By introducing radio--galaxies, we succeed in observing the fingerprint
of the transition between radiatively efficient and inefficient accretion discs
in the jetted AGN family. The transition occurs at the standard critical value
and it appears smooth. Below this value, the
ionizing luminosity emitted by the accretion structure drops significantly.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Synchrotron and Compton Components and their Variability in BL Lac Objects
BL Lacertae objects are extreme extragalactic sources characterized by the
emission of strong and rapidly variable nonthermal radiation over the entire
electromagnetic spectrum. Synchrotron emission followed by inverse Compton
scattering in a relativistic beaming scenario is generally thought to be the
mechanism powering these objects. ...Comment: 4 pages, TeX plus 3 figures. Proceedings of the conference "X-ray
Astronomy 1999", September 6-10,1999, Bologn
Constraints on the Physical Parameters of TeV Blazars
We consider the constraints on the physical parameters of a homogeneous SSC
model that can be derived from the spectral shape and variability of TeV
blazars. Assuming that the relativistic electron spectrum is a broken power
law, where the break energy is a free parameter, we write the
analytical formulae that allow to connect the physical parameters of the model
to observable quantities. The constraints can be summarized in a plane where
the coordinates are the Doppler factor and the magnetic field. The consistency
between the break energy and the balance between cooling and escape and the
interpretation of the soft photon lags measured in some sources as radiative
cooling times are treated as additional independent constraints.
We apply themethod to the case of three well known blazars, PKS 2155-304, Mrk
421 and Mrk 501.Comment: 36 pages, incl. 6 figures in PS format, AAS LaTeX, to be published in
ApJ, Dec 199
High redshift Fermi blazars observed by GROND and Swift
We observed 5 gamma-ray loud blazars at redshift greater than 2 with the
X-Ray Telescope (XRT) and the UltraViolet and Optical Telescope (UVOT) onboard
the Swift satellite, and the Gamma-Ray burst Optical Near-Infrared Detector
(GROND) instrument. These observations were quasi simultaneous, usually within
a few hours. For 4 of these blazars the near-IR to UV data show the presence of
an accretion disc, and we could reliably estimate its accretion rate and black
hole mass. One of them, PKS 1348+007, was found in an extraordinarily high
IR-optical state, almost two orders of magnitude brighter than at the epoch of
the Sloan Digital Sky Survey observations. For all the 5 quasars the physical
parameters of the jet emitting zone, derived by applying a one-zone emission
model, are similar to that found for the bulk of other gamma-ray loud quasars.
With our observations we have X-ray data for the full sample of blazars at z>2
present in the Fermi 2-yrs (2LAC) catalog. This allows to have a rather
complete view of the spectral energy distribution of all high-redshift Fermi
blazars, and to draw some conclusions about their properties, and especially
about the relation between the accretion rate and the jet power.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, submitted to MNRA
BeppoSAX Observations of 1-Jy BL Lacertae Objects - II
We present new BeppoSAX LECS and MECS observations, covering the energy range
0.1 - 10 keV (observer's frame), of four BL Lacertae objects selected from the
1 Jy sample. All sources display a flat (alpha_x ~ 0.7) X-ray spectrum, which
we interpret as inverse Compton emission. One object shows evidence for a
low-energy steepening (Delta alpha_x ~ 0.9) which is likely due to the
synchrotron component merging into the inverse Compton one around ~ 2 keV. A
variable synchrotron tail would explain why the ROSAT spectra of our sources
are typically steeper than the BeppoSAX ones (Delta alpha_x} ~ 0.7). The
broad-band spectral energy distributions fully confirm this picture and model
fits using a synchrotron inverse Compton model allow us to derive the physical
parameters (intrinsic power, magnetic field, etc.) of our sources. By combining
the results of this paper with those previously obtained on other sources we
present a detailed study of the BeppoSAX properties of a well-defined
sub-sample of 14 X-ray bright (f_x (0.1 - 10 keV) > 3 x 10^{-12} erg/cm^2/s)
1-Jy BL Lacs. We find a very tight proportionality between nearly simultaneous
radio and X-ray powers for the 1-Jy sources in which the X-ray band is
dominated by inverse Compton emission, which points to a strong link between
X-ray and radio emission components in these objects.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS. Postscript
file also available at http://www.stsci.edu/~padovani/xrayspectra_papers.htm
High Energy Break and Reflection Features in the Seyfert Galaxy MCG+8-11-11
We present the results from ASCA and OSSE simultaneous observations of the
Seyfert 1.5 galaxy MCG+8-11-11 performed in August-September 1995. The ASCA
observations indicate a modest flux increase (20%) in 3 days, possibly
correlated to a softening of the 0.6-9 keV spectrum. The spectrum is well
described by a hard power law (Gamma=1.64) absorbed by a column density
slightly larger than the Galactic value, with an iron line at 6.4 keV of EW=400
eV. The simultaneous OSSE data are characterized by a much softer power law
with photon index Gamma=3.0, strongly suggesting the presence of a spectral
break in the hard X/soft gamma-ray band. A joint fit to OSSE and ASCA data
clearly shows an exponential cut-off at about 300 keV, and strong reflection
component. MCG+8-11-11 features a spectral break in the underlying continuum
unambiguously. This, together with the inferred low compactness of this source,
favours thermal or quasi-thermal electron Comptonization in a structured Corona
as the leading process of high energy radiation production.Comment: 13 pages, + 4 figure.ps AAS LateX [11pt,aasms4]{article} To be
published in ApJ, Main Journa
High-energy neutrinos from FR0 radio-galaxies?
The sources responsible for the emission of high-energy ( 100 TeV)
neutrinos detected by IceCube are still unknown. Among the possible candidates,
active galactic nuclei with relativistic jets are often examined, since the
outflowing plasma seems to offer the ideal environment to accelerate the
required parent high-energy cosmic rays. The non-detection of single point
sources or -- almost equivalently -- the absence, in the IceCube events, of
multiplets originating from the same sky position, constrains the cosmic
density and the neutrino output of these sources, pointing to a numerous
population of faint sources. Here we explore the possibility that FR0
radiogalaxies, the population of compact sources recently identified in large
radio and optical surveys and representing the bulk of radio-loud AGN
population, can represent suitable candidates for neutrino emission. Modeling
the spectral energy distribution of a FR0 radiogalaxy recently associated to a
-ray source detected by the Large Area Telescope onboard Fermi, we
derive the physical parameters of its jet, in particular the power carried by
it. We consider the possible mechanisms of neutrino production, concluding that
reactions in the jet between protons and ambient radiation is too
inefficient to sustain the required output. We propose an alternative scenario,
in which protons, accelerated in the jet, escape from it and diffuse in the
host galaxy, producing neutrinos as a result of scattering with the
interstellar gas, in strict analogy with the processes taking place in
star-forming galaxies.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Multi-Wavelength Variability of the Synchrotron Self-Compton Model for Blazar Emission
Motivated by recent reports of strongly correlated radio and X-ray
variability in 3C279 (Grandi, etal 1995), we have computed the relative
amplitudes of variations in the synchrotron flux at and the self-Compton
X-ray flux at 1 keV () for a homogeneous sphere of relativistic
electrons orbiting in a tangled magnetic field. Relative to synchrotron
self-Compton scattering without induced Compton scattering, stimulated
scattering reduces the amplitude of by as much as an order of
magnitude when \tau_T \gtwid 1. When varies in a fixed magnetic
field, increases monotonically from 0.01 at , the
self-absorption turnover frequency, to at . The relative
amplitudes of the correlated fluctuations in the radio-mm and X-ray fluxes from
3C279 are consistent with the synchrotron self-Compton model if varies
in a fixed magnetic field and induced Compton scattering is the dominant source
of radio opacity. The variation amplitudes are are too small to be produced by
the passage of a shock through the synchrotron emission region unless the
magnetic field is perpendicular to the shock front.Comment: 21 pages, 4 fig
Modeling the flaring activity of the high z, hard X-ray selected blazar IGR J22517+2217
We present new Suzaku and Fermi data, and re-analyzed archival hard X-ray
data from INTEGRAL and Swift-BAT survey, to investigate the physical properties
of the luminous, high-redshift, hard X-ray selected blazar IGR J22517+2217,
through the modelization of its broad band spectral energy distribution (SED)
in two different activity states. Through the analysis of the new Suzaku data
and the flux selected data from archival hard X-ray observations, we build the
source SED in two different states, one for the newly discovered flare occurred
in 2005 and one for the following quiescent period. Both SEDs are strongly
dominated by the high energy hump peaked at 10^20 -10^22 Hz, that is at least
two orders of magnitude higher than the low energy (synchrotron) one at 10^11
-10^14 Hz, and varies by a factor of 10 between the two states. In both states
the high energy hump is modeled as inverse Compton emission between
relativistic electrons and seed photons produced externally to the jet, while
the synchrotron self-Compton component is found to be negligible. In our model
the observed variability can be accounted for by a variation of the total
number of emitting electrons, and by a dissipation region radius changing from
within to outside the broad line region as the luminosity increases. In its
flaring activity, IGR J22517+2217 shows one of the most powerful jet among the
population of extreme, hard X-ray selected, high redshift blazar observed so
far.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
Emission and power of blazar jets
Through the modelling of the Spectral Energy Distribution of blazars we can
infer the physical parameters required to originate the flux we see. Then we
can estimate the power of blazar jets in the form of matter and fields. These
estimates are rather robust for all classes of blazars, although they are in
part dependent of the chosen model (i.e. leptonic rather than adronic). The
indication is that, in almost all cases, the carried Poynting flux is not
dominant, while protons should carry most of the power. In emission line
blazars the jet has a comparable, and often larger, power than the luminosity
of the accretion disk. This is even more true for line-less BL Lacs. If the jet
is structured at the sub-pc scale, with a fast spine surrounded by a slower
layer, then one component sees the radiation of the other boosted, and this
interplay enhances the Inverse Compton flux of both. Since the layer emission
is less beamed, it can be seen also at large viewing angles, making
radio-galaxies very interesting GLAST candidates. Such structures need not be
stable components, and can form and disappear rapidly. Ultrafast TeV
variability is challenging all existing models, suggesting that at least parts
of the jets are moving with large bulk Lorentz factors and at extremely small
viewing angles. However, these fast "bullets" are not necessarily challenging
our main ideas about the energetics and the composition of the bulk of the jet.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, invited talk at the workshop: High Energy
Phenomena in Relativistic Outflows (HEPRO), Dublin, 24-28 September 200
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