256 research outputs found
EVLA Observations of OH Masers in ON 1
This Letter reports on initial Expanded Very Large Array (EVLA) observations
of the 6035 MHz masers in ON 1. The EVLA data are of good quality, lending
confidence in the new receiver system. Nineteen maser features, including six
Zeeman pairs, are detected. The overall distribution of 6035 MHz OH masers is
similar to that of the 1665 MHz OH masers. The spatial resolution is sufficient
to unambiguously determine that the magnetic field is strong (~ -10 mG) at the
location of the blueshifted masers in the north, consistent with Zeeman
splitting detected in 13441 MHz OH masers in the same velocity range. Left and
right circularly polarized ground-state features dominate in different regions
in the north of the source, which may be due to a combination of magnetic field
and velocity gradients. The combined distribution of all OH masers toward the
south is suggestive of a shock structure of the sort previously seen in W3(OH).Comment: 4 pages using emulateapj.cls including 2 tables and 2 color figure
The Origin of Radio Emission in Low-Luminosity Active Galactic Nuclei: Jets, Accretion Flows, or Both?
The low-luminosity active galactic nuclei in NGC 3147, NGC 4203, and NGC 4579
have been imaged at four frequencies with the Very Long Baseline Array. The
galaxies are unresolved at all frequencies, with size upper limits of
times the Schwarzschild radii of their central massive black holes.
The spectral indices between 1.7 and 5.0 GHz range from 0.2 to 0.4; one and
possibly two of the galaxies show spectral turnovers between 5.0 and 8.4 GHz.
The high brightness temperatures ( K) and relatively straight spectra
imply that free-free emission and/or absorption cannot account for the slightly
inverted spectra. Although the radio properties of the cores superficially
resemble predictions for advection-dominated accretion flows, the radio
luminosities are too high compared to the X-ray luminosities. We suggest that
the bulk of the radio emission is generated by a compact radio jet, which may
coexist with a low radiative efficiency accretion flow.Comment: To appear in ApJ (Letters). 4 page
A Flaring Megamaser in Mrk 348
We report new observations of the H2O megamaser in the Seyfert 2 galaxy Mrk
348. Following our initial detection in 2000 March using the Effelsberg 100 m
telescope, re-analysis of previous data on this source indicates that the maser
was present but only marginally detectable in late 1997. Monitoring through
late 2000 shows that the maser has again decreased to its original level. The
H2O line is redshifted by ~130 km/s with respect to the systemic velocity, is
extremely broad, with a FWHM of 130 km/s, and has no detectable high velocity
components within 1500 km/s on either side of the strong line. Followup VLBA
observations show that the maser emission emanates entirely from a region >0.25
pc in extent, toward the base of the radio jet.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, to appear in Cosmic Masers: from Protostars to
Black Holes, IAU 206, Eds. V. Migenes et al., ASP Conference Serie
A Search for Active Galactic Nuclei in Sc Galaxies with H II Spectra
(Abridged) We have searched for nuclear radio emission from a statistically
complete sample of 40 Sc galaxies within 30 Mpc that are optically classified
as star-forming objects, in order to determine whether weak AGNs might be
present. Only three nuclear radio sources were detected, in NGC 864, NGC 4123,
and NGC 4535. These galaxies have peak 6-cm radio powers of 10^{20} W/Hz at
arcsecond resolution, while upper limits of the non-detected galaxies typically
range from 10^{18.4} to 10^{20} W/Hz. The three nuclear radio sources all are
resolved and appear to have diffuse morphologies, with linear sizes of ~300 pc.
This strongly indicates that circumnuclear star formation has been detected in
these three H II galaxies. Comparison with previous 20-cm VLA results for the
detected galaxies shows that the extended nuclear radio emission has a flat
spectrum in two objects, and almost certainly is generated by thermal emission
from gas ionized by young stars in the centers of those galaxies. The 6-cm
radio powers are comparable to predictions for thermal emission that are based
on the nuclear H-alpha luminosities, and imply nuclear star formation rates of
0.08-0.8 solar masses/yr, while the low-resolution NRAO VLA Sky Survey implies
galaxy-wide star formation rates of 0.3-1.0 solar masses/yr in stars above 5
solar masses. Although the presence of active nuclei powered by massive black
holes cannot be definitively ruled out, the present results suggest that they
are likely to be rare in these late-type galaxies with H II spectra.Comment: To appear in ApJ. 7 page
Weak field limit of Reissner-Nordstrom black hole lensing
We study gravitational lensing by a Reissner-Nordstrom (RN) black hole in the
weak field limit. We obtain the basic equations for the deflection angle and
time delay and find analytical expressions for the positions and amplifications
of the primary and secondary images. Due to a net positive charge, the
separation between images increases, but no change in the total magnification
occurs.Comment: 8 pages, to appear in Phys. Rev.
The Starburst in the Central Kiloparsec of Markarian 231
We present VLBA observations at 0.33 and 0.61 GHz, and VLA observations
between 5 and 22 GHz, of subkiloparsec scale radio emission from Mrk 231. In
addition to jet components clearly associated with the AGN, we also find a
smooth extended component of size 100 - 1000 pc most probably related to the
purported massive star forming disk in Mrk 231. The diffuse radio emission from
the disk is found to have a steep spectrum at high frequencies, characteristic
of optically thin synchrotron emission. The required relativistic particle
density in the disk can be produced by a star formation rate of 220 Msolar/yr
in the central kiloparsec. At low frequencies the disk is absorbed, most likely
by ionized gas with an emission measure of 8 x 10^5 pc cm-6. We have also
identified 4 candidate radio supernovae that, if confirmed, represent direct
evidence for ongoing star formation in the central kiloparsec.Comment: in press at ApJ for v. 519 July 1999, 14 page LaTeX document includes
6 postscript figure
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