175 research outputs found
More evidence for extinction of activity in galaxies
This Research Note amends an article in which we showed that radio-loud
quasars can become radio-quiet. Exploring the analogy between galactic nuclei
and X-ray binaries (XRB), we pointed out there that this transition in quasars
could be identified with a switch from low/hard to high/soft state in
microquasars. Here, we present the evidence that traces of past occurrences of
this kind of phenomena can be found in normal but once active galaxies. Based
on the properties of a few such "post-active" galaxies that are representative
for a much wider group, it has been argued that they have reached the
evolutionary stages when their nuclei, which were radio-loud in the past, now,
mimicking the behaviour of XRBs, remain in the intermediate state on their way
towards quiescence or even have already entered the quiescent state. It follows
that the full evolutionary track of XRBs can be mapped onto the evolution of
galaxies. The above findings are in line with those reported recently for IC
2497, a galaxy that 70,000 years ago or less hosted a quasar but now appears as
a normal one. This scenario stems from the presence of Hanny's Voorwerp, a
nebulous object in its vicinity excited by that QSO in the epoch when IC 2497
was active. The post-active galaxies we deal with here are accompanied by
extremely weak and diffuse relic radio lobes that were inflated during their
former active period. These relics can be regarded as radio analogues of
Hanny's Voorwerp.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, A&A in pres
Signatures of restarted activity in core-dominated, triple radio sources selected from the FIRST survey
Signatures of the re-occurrence of activity in radio-loud AGNs, indicated
either by the so-called double-double or X-shaped structures, have been
observed in a number of radio sources. All such objects known to date have
linear sizes of the order of a megaparsec. A number of the sources that are
appreciably more compact than this, but that exhibit hints of a past phase of
activity, were found in the VLA FIRST survey. Their structures show symmetric
relic lobes straddling relatively bright, unresolved cores. Observations of the
cores of 15 such structures with MERLIN at 5 GHz have shown that four of them
are doubles or core-jets on the subarcsecond scale. Misalignments of \Delta PA
\ga 30 degr. between the axis of the inner structure and the line connecting
the fitted maxima of the arcminute-scale relic lobes are clearly visible in
three of the four sources. From these results, we can infer that a rapid
repositioning of the central engine in each of these three radio sources is the
most plausible interpretation of the observed morphology and that a merger is
most likely the original cause of such a repositioning. In the case of TXS
1033+026, the optical image extracted from the SDSS archives clearly suggests
that two objects separated by only 2.7 kpc (projected onto the sky plane) are
indeed merging. The inner parts of TXS 0818+214 and TXS 1312+563 could be
interpreted as double-lobed, and consequently, these sources could be of the
double-double type; but further multifrequency observations are necessary to
provide support for such an interpretation.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, matches the version printed in Astronomy &
Astrophysics, very minor correction of Table
Gigahertz Peaked Spectrum sources from the Jodrell Bank-VLA Astrometric Survey
Observations with MERLIN at 408 MHz have been used to establish the
low-frequency part of the spectra of more than a hundred compact radio sources
taken from the part of the Jodrell Bank--VLA Astrometric Survey limited by 35
deg. < \delta < 75 deg. These sources were selected from JVAS and other
catalogues to have convex spectra between 1.4 and 8.4 GHz, characteristic of
Gigahertz Peaked Spectrum (GPS) sources. We have confirmed convex shapes of the
spectra of 76 objects (one half of our initial candidates) thereby yielding the
largest genuine sample of GPS sources compiled so far. Seven of 17 identified
quasars in the sample have large (z\ga 2) redshifts.Comment: 18 pages, 2 figures, minor corrections. To appear in: A&A Suppl. vol.
135 (March 1999
Are 3C249.1 and 3C334 restarted quasars?
This Research Note follows up a Letter in which I posit that J1211+743 is a
restarted radio source. This means that its structure, where the jet points to
the relic lobe, is only apparently paradoxical. Here, I propose the same
scenario and apply the same mathematical model to 3C249.1 and 3C334. The
ultimate result of my investigation is that these two well-known radio-loud
quasars can be understood best so far if it was assumed that they, too, had
been restarted.Comment: 4 pages, accepted for publication in A&A as a Research Not
Effects of Vacuum Fluctuation Suppression on Atomic Decay Rates
The use of atomic decay rates as a probe of sub-vacuum phenomena will be
studied. Because electromagnetic vacuum fluctuations are essential for
radiative decay of excited atomic states, decay rates can serve as a measure of
the suppression of vacuum fluctuation in non-classical states, such as squeezed
vacuum states. In such states the renormalized expectation value of the square
of the electric field or the energy density can be periodically negative,
representing suppression of vacuum fluctuations. We explore the extent to which
atomic decays can be used to measure the mean squared electric field or energy
density. We consider a scheme in which atoms in an excited state transit a
closed cavity whose lowest mode contains photons in a non-classical state. The
change in the decay probability of the atom in the cavity due to the
non-classical state can, under certain circumstances, serve as a measure of the
mean squared electric field or energy density in the cavity. We derive a
quantum inequality bound on the decrease in this probability. We also show that
the decrease in decay rate can sometimes be a measure of negative energy
density or negative squared electric field. We make some estimates of the
magnitude of this effect, which indicate that an experimental test might be
possible.Comment: 19 pages, 3 figure
A survey of Low Luminosity Compact sources and its implication for evolution of radio-loud AGNs. I. Radio data
We present a new sample of Compact Steep Spectrum (CSS) sources with radio
luminosity below 10^26 W/Hz at 1.4 GHz called the low luminosity compact (LLC)
objects. The sources have been selected from FIRST survey and observed with
MERLIN at L-band and C-band. The main criterion used for selection was
luminosity of the objects and approximately one third of the CSS sources from
the new sample have a value of radio luminosity comparable to FRIs. About 80%
of the sources have been resolved and about 30% of them have weak extended
emission and disturbed structures when compared with the observations of higher
luminosity CSS sources. We studied correlation between radio power and linear
size, and redshift with a larger sample that included also published samples of
compact objects and large scale FRIIs and FRIs. The low luminosity compact
objects occupy the space in radio power versus linear size diagram below the
main evolutionary path of radio objects. We suggest that many of them might be
short-lived objects, and their radio emission may be disrupted several times
before becoming FRIIs. We conclude that there exists a large population of
short-lived low luminosity compact objects unexplored so far and part of them
can be precursors of large scale FRIs.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures, 3 tables, MNRAS in pres
The structure at the centre of the giant radio galaxy GRS J0844+4627: a compact symmetric object?
We observed the core region of the giant radio galaxy GRS J0844+4627 with
e-MERLIN at 1.52 and 5.07 GHz. These observations revealed that the apparent
single feature at the centre of GRS J0844+4627, as seen by GMRT, consists of
two components separated by 2.7 kpc in projection. Follow-up observations at
1.66 GHz using the EVN unveiled the complex morphologies of the two components.
In particular, the south-western component identified with the SDSS
J084408.85+462744.2 galaxy morphologically resembles a compact symmetric object
(CSO) with a projected linear size of 115 pc. If the CSO hypothesis turns out
to be correct, then the overall radio structure of GRS J0844+4627 is
triple-double. Given that CSOs are considered young objects, GRS J0844+4627
would appear as a recently restarted active galaxy.Comment: Matches the version published in MNRA
Hybrid morphology radio sources from FIRST survey
The so-called HYbrid MOrphology Radio Sources (HYMORS) are a class of objects
that appear to have a mixed Fanaroff-Riley (FR) morphology in a single object;
i.e. a HYMORS has an FR I-type lobe on one side of its nucleus and an FR
II-type lobe on the other side. Because of this unique feature and given that
the origin of the FR morphological dichotomy is still unclear, HYMORS may
possibly play a crucial role in our understanding of the FR-dichotomy. As the
number of known HYMORS is quite small, we aimed to increase that number by
inspecting a few areas of the sky covered by the VLA FIRST survey and by
selecting 21 HYMORS candidates based on the morphology shown in the FIRST
images. They were observed with the VLA in B-conf. at 4.9 GHz. Three objects
from the initial sample turned out to be actual HYMORS and two others very
likely to fulfill the criteria. These five were subsequently re-observed with
the VLA in A-conf. at 1.4 GHz. Our results provide strong support to the
findings of Gopal-Krishna & Wiita (2000), namely that there are two different
kinds of jets in HYMORS; consequently, the existence of FR-dichotomy as a whole
is difficult to reconcile with the class of explanations that posit fundamental
differences in the central engine.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures, matches the version printed in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
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