846 research outputs found

    The First Simultaneous 3.5 and 1.3mm Polarimetric Survey of Active Galactic Nuclei in the Northern Sky

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    Short millimeter observations of radio-loud AGN offer the opportunity to study the physics of their inner relativistic jets, from where the bulk millimeter emission is radiated. Millimeter jets are significantly less affected by Faraday rotation and depolarization than in radio. Also, the millimeter emission is dominated by the innermost jet regions, that are invisible in radio owing to synchrotron opacity. We present the first dual frequency simultaneous 86GHz and 229GHz polarimetric survey of all four Stokes parameters of a large sample of 211 radio loud active galactic nuclei, designed to be flux limited at 1Jy at 86GHz. The observations were most of them made in mid August 2010 using the XPOL polarimeter on the IRAM 30 m millimeter radio telescope. Linear polarization detections above 3 sigma median level of ~1.0% are reported for 183 sources at 86GHz, and for 23 sources at 229GHz, where the median 3 sigma level is ~6.0%. We show a clear excess of the linear polarization degree detected at 229GHz with regard to that at 86GHz by a factor of ~1.6, thus implying a progressively better ordered magnetic field for blazar jet regions located progressively upstream in the jet. We show that the linear polarization angle, both at 86 and 229GHz, and the jet structural position angle for both quasars and BL Lacs do not show a clear preference to align in either parallel or perpendicular directions. Our variability study with regard to the 86GHz data from our previous survey points out a large degree variation of total flux and linear polarization in time scales of years by median factors of ~1.5 in total flux, and ~1.7 in linear polarization degree -maximum variations by factors up to 6.3, and ~5, respectively-, with 86% of sources showing linear polarization angles evenly distributed with regard to our previous measurements.Comment: Submitted for Publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics. 14 pages (including 2 tables and 18 figures

    3C 286: a bright, compact, stable, and highly polarized calibrator for millimeter-wavelength observations

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    (Context.) A number of millimeter and submillimeter facilities with linear polarization observing capabilities have started operating during last years. These facilities, as well as other previous millimeter telescopes and interferometers, require bright and stable linear polarization calibrators to calibrate new instruments and to monitor their instrumental polarization. The current limited number of adequate calibrators implies difficulties in the acquisition of these calibration observations. (Aims.) Looking for additional linear polarization calibrators in the millimeter spectral range, in mid-2006 we started monitoring 3C 286, a standard and highly stable polarization calibrator for radio observations. (Methods.) Here we present the 3 and 1 mm monitoring observations obtained between September 2006 and January 2012 with the XPOL polarimeter on the IRAM 30 m Millimeter Telescope. (Results.) Our observations show that 3C 286 is a bright source of constant total flux with 3 mm flux density S_3mm = (0.91 \pm 0.02) Jy. The 3mm linear polarization degree (p_3mm =[13.5\pm0.3]%) and polarization angle (chi_3mm =[37.3\pm0.8]deg.,expressed in the equatorial coordinate system) are also constant during the time span of our observations. Although with poorer time sampling and signal-to-noise ratio, our 1 mm observations of 3C 286 are also reproduced by a constant source of 1 mm flux density (S_1mm = [0.30 \pm 0.03] Jy), polarization fraction (p_1mm = [14.4 \pm 1.8] %), and polarization angle (chi_1mm = [33.1 \pm 5.7]deg.). (Conclusions.) This, together with the previously known compact structure of 3C 286 -extended by ~3.5" in the sky- allow us to propose 3C 286 as a new calibrator for both single dish and interferometric polarization observations at 3 mm, and possibly at shorter wavelengths.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 7 pages, 4 figures, 8 tables. Updated data sets with regard to previous version. New discussion about multi frequency properties of the source. Section 3.3, Figures 3 and 4, and Tables 7 and 8 are ne

    Ionization structure in the winds of B[e] supergiants: I. Ionization equilibrium calculations in a H plus He wind

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    The non-spherically symmetric winds of B[e] supergiants are investigated. An empirical density distribution is chosen that accounts for the density concentrations and ratios derived from observations, and our model winds are assumed to contain only hydrogen and helium. We first calculate the approximate ionization radii for H and He and compare the results with the ionization fractions calculated from the more accurate ionization balance equations. We find that winds with a r^-2 density distribution turn out to reach a constant ionization fraction as long as the wind density is low, i.e. in polar direction. For the high density equatorial regions, however, we find that the winds become neutral just above the stellar surface of the hot and massive B[e] supergiants forming a disk-like neutral region. In such a disk molecules and dust can form even very near the hot central star.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in A&
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