155 research outputs found
The European VLBI network
The capabilities of the European very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) network are summarized. The range of baseline parameters, sensitivities, and recording and other equipment available are included. Plans for upgrading the recording facilities and the use of geostationary satellites for signal transfer and clock synchronization are discussed
A Parkes half-Jansky sample of GPS galaxies
This paper describes the selection of a new southern/equatorial sample of
Gigahertz Peaked Spectrum (GPS) radio galaxies, and subsequent optical CCD
imaging and spectroscopic observations using the ESO 3.6m telescope. The sample
consists of 49 sources with -4020 degrees, and
S(2.7GHz)>0.5 Jy, selected from the Parkes PKSCAT90 survey. About 80% of the
sources are optically identified, and about half of the identifications have
available redshifts. The R-band Hubble diagram and evolution of the host
galaxies of GPS sources are reviewed.Comment: Latex, 12 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
The inner radio jet region and the complex environment of SS433
We present multi-frequency VLBA+VLA observations of SS433 at 1.6, 5 and 15
GHz. These observations provide the highest angular resolution radio spectral
index maps ever made for this object. Motion of the components of SS433 during
the observation is detected. In addition to the usual VLBI jet structure, we
detect two radio components in the system at an anomalous position angle. These
newly discovered radio emitting regions might be related to a wind-like
equatorial outflow or to an extension of the accretion disk. We show that the
radio core component is bifurcated with a clear gap between the eastern and
western wings of emission. Modelfitting of the precessing jets and the moving
knots of SS433 shows that the kinematic centre -- i.e. the binary -- is in the
gap between the western and eastern radio core components. Spectral properties
and observed core position shifts suggest that we see a combined effect of
synchrotron self-absorption and external free-free absorption in the innermost
AU-scale region of the source. The spatial distribution of the ionized matter
is probably not spherically symmetric around the binary, but could be
disk-like.Comment: Accepted for publication by Astronomy and Astrophysic
Helical motions in the jet of blazar 1156+295
The blazar 1156+295 was observed by VLBA and EVN + MERLIN at 5 GHz in June
1996 and February 1997 respectively. The results show that the jet of the
source has structural oscillations on the milliarcsecond scale and turns
through a large angle to the direction of the arcsecond-scale extension. A
helical jet model can explain most of the observed properties of the radio
structure in 1156+295.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, to appear in New Astronomy Reviews (EVN/JIVE
Symposium No. 4, special issue
Deceleration of Relativistic Radio Components and the morphologies of Gigahertz Peaked Spectrum Sources
A relativistic radio component, which moves in a direction close to the sky
plane, will increase in flux density when it decelerates. This effect is the
basis for the qualitative model for GPS galaxies we present in this paper,
which can explain their low-variability convex spectrum, their compact double
or compact symmetric morphology, and the lack of GPS quasars at similar
redshifts. Components are expelled from the nucleus at relativistic speeds at a
large angle to the line of sight, and are decelerated (eg. by ram-pressure or
entrainment of the external gas) before contributing to a mini-lobe. The young
components are Doppler boosted in the direction of motion but appear fainter
for the observer. The non-relativistic mini-lobes dominate the structure and
are responsible for the low variability in flux density and the convex radio
spectrum as well as the compact double angular morphology. Had the same source
been orientated at a small angle to the line of sight, the young components
would be boosted in the observer's direction resulting in a flat and variable
radio spectrum at high frequencies. Hence the characteristic convex spectrum of
a GPS source would not be seen. These sources at small angles to the line of
sight are probably identified with quasars, and are not recognized as GPS
sources, but are embedded in the large population of flat spectrum variable
quasars and BL Lac objects. This leads to a deficiency in GPS/CSOs identified
with quasars.Comment: 11 pages, LaTeX, accepted by A&A 26/Jan/199
A Thin HI Circumnuclear Disk in NGC4261
We report on high sensitivity, spectral line VLBI observations of the HI
absorption feature in the radio galaxy NGC4261. Although absorption is only
detectable on the most sensitive baseline, it can be unambiguously associated
with the counterjet and is interpreted to originate in a thin atomic
circumnuclear disk. This structure is probably a continuation of the dusty
accretion disk inferred from HST imaging, which could be feeding the massive
black hole. HI column densities in front of the counterjet of the order of
10^{21}(T_sp/100 K) cm^{-2} are derived, consistent with X-ray data and VLBI
scale free-free absorption. The data presented here are the result of the first
scientific project processed on the new EVN MkIV data processor.Comment: 4 pages, 3 postscript figures, Astronomy and Astrophysics Letters, in
pres
WSRT 1.4 GHz Observations of the Hubble Deep Field
We present WSRT 1.38 GHz observations of the Hubble Deep Field (and flanking
fields). 72 hours of data were combined to produce the WSRT's deepest image
yet, achieving an r.m.s. noise level of 8 microJy per beam. We detect radio
emission from galaxies both in the HDF and HFF which have not been previously
detected by recent MERLIN or VLA studies of the field.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure, to appear in "The Universe at Low Radio
Frequencies", IAU Symposium 199. For colour figures, see
http://www.nfra.nl/~mag/hdf_wsrt.htm
Massive galaxies with very young AGN
Gigahertz Peaked Spectrum (GPS) radio galaxies are generally thought to be
the young counterparts of classical extended radio sources and live in massive
ellipticals. GPS sources are vital for studying the early evolution of
radio-loud AGN, the trigger of their nuclear activity, and the importance of
feedback in galaxy evolution. We study the Parkes half-Jansky sample of GPS
radio galaxies of which now all host galaxies have been identified and 80% has
their redshifts determined (0.122 < z < 1.539). Analysis of the absolute
magnitudes of the GPS host galaxies show that at z > 1 they are on average a
magnitude fainter than classical 3C radio galaxies. This suggests that the AGN
in young radio galaxies have not yet much influenced the overall properties of
the host galaxy. However their restframe UV luminosities indicate that there is
a low level of excess as compared to passive evolution models.Comment: To appear in the proceedings of "Formation and Evolution of Galaxy
Bulges", IAUS 245; M. Bureau, E. Athanassoula & B. Barbuy, ed
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