34 research outputs found
The extreme flare in III Zw 2: Evolution of a radio jet in a Seyfert galaxy
A very detailed monitoring of a radio flare in the Seyfert I galaxy III Zw 2
with the VLA and the VLBA is presented. The relative astrometry in the VLBA
observations was precise on a level of a few microarcseconds. Spectral and
spatial evolution of the source are closely linked and these observations
allowed us to study in great detail a textbook example of a synchrotron
self-absorbed jet. We observe a phase where the jet gets frustrated, without
expansion and no spectral evolution. Then the jet breaks free and starts to
expand with apparent superluminal motion. This expansion is accompanied by a
strong spectral evolution. The results are a good confirmation of synchrotron
theory and equipartition for jets.Comment: Astronomy & Astrophysics, accepted, 11 pages, 14 Figures, also
available at http://www.jive.nl/~brunthal/pub.shtm
A kinematic study of the compact jet in quasar B3 1633+382
We present a study of the motion of compact jet components in quasar B3
1633+382. Through analyzing 14 epochs of VLBI observations of three components
(B1, B2, and B3) at 22 GHz, we find two different possibilities of component
classification. Thus two corresponding kinematical models can be adopted to
explain the evolutionary track of components. One is a linear motion, while
another is a helical model. Future observations are needed to provide new
kinematical constraints for the motion of these components in this source.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures; Accepted for publication in A&
Optical and Radio monitoring of S5 1803+74
The optical (BVRI) and radio (8.4 GHz) light curves of S5 1803+784 on a time
span of nearly 6 years are presented and discussed. The optical light curve
showed an overall variation greater than 3 mag, and the largest changes occured
in three strong flares. No periodicity was found in the light curve on time
scales up to a year. The variability in the radio band is very different, and
shows moderate oscillations around an average constant flux density rather than
relevant flares, with a maximum amplitude of 30%, without a simultaneous
correspondence between optical and radio luminosity. The optical spectral
energy distribution was always well fitted by a power law. The spectral index
shows small variations and there is indication of a positive correlation with
the source luminosity. Possible explanations of the source behaviour are
discussed in the framework of current models.Comment: 25 pages, 12 figure
Multifrequency Observations of the Virgo Blazars 3C 273 and 3C 279 in CGRO Cycle 8
We report first observational results of multifrequency campaigns on the
prominent Virgo blazars 3C 273 and 3C 279 which were carried out in January and
February 1999. Both blazars are detected from radio to gamma-ray energies. We
present the measured X- to gamma-ray spectra of both sources, and for 3C 279 we
compare the 1999 broad-band (radio to gamma-ray) spectrum to measured previous
ones.Comment: 5 pages including 3 figures, latex2e, to appear in: 'Proc. of the 5th
Compton Symposium', AIP, in pres