655 research outputs found
Six years of BeppoSAX observations of blazars: a spectral catalog
We present a spectral catalog for blazars based on the BeppoSAX archive. The
sample includes 44 High-energy peaked BL Lacs (HBLs), 14 Low-energy peaked BL
Lacs (LBLs), and 28 Flat Spectrum Radio Quasars (FSRQs). A total of 168 LECS,
MECS, and PDS spectra were analyzed, corresponding to observations taken in the
period 1996--2002. The 0.1--50 keV continuum of LBLs and FSRQs is generally
fitted by a single power law with Galactic column density. A minority of the
observations of LBLs (25%) and FSRQs (15%) is best fitted by more complex
models like the broken power law or the continuously curved parabola. These
latter models provide also the best description for half of the HBL spectra.
Complex models are more frequently required for sources with fluxes F_{2-10
keV} > 10^-11 cm-2 s-1, corresponding to spectra with higher signal-to-noise
ratio. As a result, considering sources with flux above this threshold, the
percentage of spectra requiring those models increases for all the classes. We
note that there is a net separation of X-ray spectral properties between HBLs
on one side, and LBLs and FSRQs on the other, the distinction between LBLs and
FSRQs is more blurry. This is most likely related to ambiguities in the optical
classification of the two classes.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, 7 tables. Accepted for publication in A&
Understanding Blazar Jets Through Their Multifrequency Emission
Being dominated by non-thermal (synchrotron and inverse Compton) emission
from a relativistic jet, blazars offer important clues to the structure and
radiative processes in extragalactic jets. Crucial information is provided by
blazars' spectral energy distributions from radio to gamma-rays (GeV and TeV
energies), their trends with bolometric luminosity, and their correlated
variability properties. This review is focussed on recent multiwavelength
monitorings of confirmed and candidate TeV blazars and the constraints they
provide for the radiative properties of the emitting particles. I also present
recent observations of the newly discovered class of ``blue quasars'' and the
implications for current blazars' unification schemes.Comment: invited opening talk at the GeV-TeV Astronomy International meeting
held at the Snowbird resort, Salt Lake City, Utah, August 199
X-ray Variability and Emission Process of the Radio Jet in M87
We monitored the M87 jet with the ACIS-S detector on Chandra with 5
observations between 2002 Jan and 2002 Jul. Our goal was to determine the
presence and degree of variability in morphology, intensity, and spectral
parameters. We find strong variability of the core and HST-1, the knot lying
0.8" from the core. These observations were designed to constrain the X-ray
emission process: whereas synchrotron emission would necessitate the presence
of extremely high energy electrons with a halflife of a few years or less,
inverse Compton emission from a relativistic jet would arise from low energy
electrons with very long halflives. Currently, all indications point to a
synchrotron process for the X-ray emission from the M87 jet. We give key
parameters for a ``modest beaming'' synchrotron model.Comment: 4 pages with 2 embedded figures (1 in color). To be published in the
proceedings of the Bologna Jet Workshop "The Physics of Relativistic Jets in
the CHANDRA and XMM Era", 23-27 September 2002, Brunetti, Harris, Sambruna,
and Setti, editors. 2003, New Ast. Re
Constraints on the Low-Energy Cutoff in the Electron Distribution of the PKS 0637-752 Jet
We re-analyze the Chandra ACIS spectrum of the kpc-scale jet in PKS 0637-752
to investigate the possible low energy cutoff in the relativistic electron
spectrum producing the non-thermal radiation in the scenario of inverse Compton
emission off the cosmic microwave background. This was among the first objects
targeted by the Chandra Observatory and gives a unique opportunity to study the
low energy X-ray emission free of detector contamination. As previously
reported in the literature, the spectrum can be fit by a power law, with the
slope predicted by the radio spectrum, modified by low energy absorption
through the Galaxy as determined from the spectrum of the quasar core and by HI
21 cm observations. We obtain a marginally better fit with an model of inverse
Compton emission produced by an electron population that exhibits a cutoff at
(gamma_min delta_10) between about 50 and 80 (assuming Gamma = delta). This
range for gamma_min is higher than has previously been assumed in broad-band
spectral fits to the jet emission. The observed optical flux can be used to
place a lower limit on gamma_min; the constraint is not very strong, but does
suggest that gamma_min must be higher than 1 to avoid overproducing the optical
emission. We investigate the effect of uncertainties in the column density for
galactic absorption as well as the calibration of Chandra for these early
observations. Finally, we discuss the implication of these limits on the jet
luminosity in this source.Comment: 23 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
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