2,289 research outputs found
The Nuclear Jet in M81
In this paper we apply the jet-disk symbiosis model developed for Sgr A* to
M81* -- the nucleus of the nearby galaxy M81. The model accurately predicts
radio flux and size of M81* for the observed bolometric luminosity of the
nuclear source with no major free parameter except for the inclination angle.
We point out that the usually applied free, conical jet emission model implies
a longitudinal pressure gradient that must lead to a moderate acceleration of
the jet along its flow direction. This, usually neglected, gradual acceleration
naturally accounts for the inverted spectrum and the size/frequency relation of
M81* and may be a general feature of radio cores. M81* is so far the best case
for a radio-loud jet nature of the compact radio core in the nucleus of a
nearby spiral galaxy. The fact that one can account for Sgr A* and M81* with
the same model by simply changing the accretion rate, strongly supports the
jet-disk symbiosis model as an explanation for the compact radio cores of
galaxies in general.Comment: ApJ Letters, accepted for publication, AAS LaTex, 8 pages, 1
PS-figure, also available at
http://www.astro.umd.edu/~hfalcke/publications.html or by reques
Accretion Disk Evolution With Wind Infall I. General Solution and Application to Sgr A*
The evolution of an accretion disk can be influenced significantly by the
deposition of mass and angular momentum by an infalling Bondi-Hoyle wind. Such
a mass influx impacts the long-term behavior of the disk by providing
additional sources of viscosity and heating. In this paper, we derive and solve
the disk equations when these effects are taken into account. We present a
survey of models with various wind configurations and demonstrate that the disk
spectrum may then differ substantially from that of a standard alpha-disk. In
particular, it is likely that a wind-fed disk has a significant infrared bump
due to the deposition of energy in its outer region. We apply some of the
results of our calculations to the Galactic Center black hole candidate Sgr A*
and show that if a fossil disk is present in this source, it must have a very
low viscosity parameter (alpha<10^-4) and the Bondi-Hoyle wind must be
accreting with a very high specific angular momentum to prevent it from
circularizing in the inner disk region where its impact would be most
noticeable.Comment: accepted for The Astrophysical Journal, AAS LaTex, 20 pages, also
available at http://www.astro.umd.edu/~hfalcke/publications.html#wintercep
A jet model for the broadband spectrum of XTE J1118+480: Synchrotron emission from radio to X-rays in the Low/Hard spectral state
Observations have revealed strong evidence for powerful jets in the Low/Hard
states of black hole candidate X-ray binaries. Correlations, both temporal and
spectral, between the radio -- infrared and X-ray bands suggest that jet
synchrotron as well as inverse Compton emission could also be significantly
contributing at higher frequencies. We show here that, for reasonable
assumptions about the jet physical parameters, the broadband spectrum from
radio through X-rays can be almost entirely fit by synchrotron emission. We
explore a relatively simple model for a relativistic, adiabatically expanding
jet combined with a truncated thermal disk conjoined by an ADAF, in the context
of the recently discovered black hole binary XTE J1118+480. In particular, the
X-ray power-law emission can be explained as optically thin synchrotron
emission from a shock acceleration region in the innermost part of the jet,
with a cutoff determined by cooling losses. For synchrotron cooling-limited
particle acceleration, the spectral cutoff is a function only of dimensionless
plasma parameters and thus should be around a ``canonical'' value for sources
with similar plasma properties. It is therefore possible that non-thermal jet
emission is important for XTE J1118+480 and possibly other X-ray binaries in
the Low/Hard state.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, accepted for A&A Letters, reformatted and
shortened to fit page limit, discusses "canonical 100 keV cutoff" and some
minor changes, also available at
http://www.mpifr-bonn.mpg.de/staff/hfalcke/publications.html#j111
Outflow-Dominated Emission from the Quiescent Massive Black Holes in NGC 4621 and NGC 4697
The nearby elliptical galaxies NGC 4621 and NGC 4697 each host a supermassive
black hole with a mass more than 1e8 Solar masses. Analysis of archival Chandra
data and new NRAO Very Large Array data shows that each galaxy contains a
low-luminosity active galactic nucleus (LLAGN), identified as a faint, hard
X-ray source that is astrometrically coincident with a faint 8.5-GHz source.
The latter has a diameter less than 0.3 arcsec (26 pc for NGC 4621, 17 pc for
NGC 4697). The black holes energizing these LLAGNs have Eddington ratios L(2-10
keV) / L(Edd) ~ 1e-9, placing them in the so-called quiescent regime. The
emission from these quiescent black holes is radio-loud, with log Rx = log
nuLnu(8.5 GHz) / L(2-10 keV) ~ -2, suggesting the presence of a radio outflow.
Also, application of the radio-X-ray-mass relation from Yuan & Cui for
quiescent black holes predicts the observed radio luminosities nuLnu(8.5 GHz)
to within a factor of a few. Significantly, that relation invokes X-ray
emission from the outflow rather than from an accretion flow. The faint, but
detectable, emission from these two massive black holes is therefore consistent
with being outflow-dominated. Observational tests of this finding are
suggested.Comment: 11 pages; 4 figures: emulateapj; to appear in Ap
The Spectrum and Variability of Circular Polarization in Sagittarius A* from 1.4 to 15 GHz
We report here multi-epoch, multi-frequency observations of the circular
polarization in Sagittarius A*, the compact radio source in the Galactic
Center. Data taken from the VLA archive indicate that the fractional circular
polarization at 4.8 GHz was -0.31% with an rms scatter of 0.13% from 1981 to
1998, in spite of a factor of 2 change in the total intensity. The sign
remained negative over the entire time range, indicating a stable magnetic
field polarity. In the Summer of 1999 we obtained 13 epochs of VLA A-array
observations at 1.4, 4.8, 8.4 and 15 GHz. In May, September and October of 1999
we obtained 11 epochs of Australia Telescope Compact Array observations at 4.8
and 8.5 GHz. In all three of the data sets, we find no evidence for linear
polarization greater than 0.1% in spite of strong circular polarization
detections. Both VLA and ATCA data sets support three conclusions regarding the
fractional circular polarization: the average spectrum is inverted with a
spectral index ~0.5 +/- 0.2; the degree of variability is roughly constant on
timescales of days to years; and, the degree of variability increases with
frequency. We also observed that the largest increase in fractional circular
polarization was coincident with the brightest flare in total intensity.
Significant variability in the total intensity and fractional circular
polarization on a timescale of 1 hour was observed during this flare,
indicating an upper limit to the size of 70 AU at 15 GHz. The fractional
circular polarization at 15 GHz reached -1.1% and the spectral index is
strongly inverted during this flare. We conclude that the spectrum has two
components that match the high and low frequency total intensity components.
(abridged)Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, 40 pages, 18 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
The Rotation Measure and 3.5mm Polarization of Sgr A*
We report the detection of variable linear polarization from Sgr A* at a
wavelength of 3.5mm, the longest wavelength yet at which a detection has been
made. The mean polarization is 2.1 +/- 0.1% at a position angle of 16 +/- 2 deg
with rms scatters of 0.4% and 9 deg over the five epochs. We also detect
polarization variability on a timescale of days. Combined with previous
detections over the range 150-400GHz (750-2000 microns), the average
polarization position angles are all found to be consistent with a rotation
measure of -4.4 +/- 0.3 x 10^5 rad/m^2. This implies that the Faraday rotation
occurs external to the polarized source at all wavelengths. This implies an
accretion rate ~0.2 - 4 x 10^-8 Msun/yr for the accretion density profiles
expected of ADAF, jet and CDAF models and assuming that the region at which
electrons in the accretion flow become relativistic is within 10 R_S. The
inferred accretion rate is inconsistent with ADAF/Bondi accretion. The
stability of the mean polarization position angle between disparate
polarization observations over the frequency range limits fluctuations in the
accretion rate to less than 5%. The flat frequency dependence of the inter-day
polarization position angle variations also makes them difficult to attribute
to rotation measure fluctuations, and suggests that both the magnitude and
position angle variations are intrinsic to the emission.Comment: Ap.J.Lett. accepte
Viewing the Shadow of the Black Hole at the Galactic Center
In recent years, the evidence for the existence of an ultra-compact
concentration of dark mass associated with the radio source Sgr A* in the
Galactic Center has become very strong. However, an unambiguous proof that this
object is indeed a black hole is still lacking. A defining characteristic of a
black hole is the event horizon. To a distant observer, the event horizon casts
a relatively large ``shadow'' with an apparent diameter of ~10 gravitational
radii due to bending of light by the black hole, nearly independent of the
black hole spin or orientation. The predicted size (~30 micro-arcseconds) of
this shadow for Sgr A* approaches the resolution of current
radio-interferometers. If the black hole is maximally spinning and viewed
edge-on, then the shadow will be offset by ~8 micro-arcseconds from the center
of mass, and will be slightly flattened on one side. Taking into account
scatter-broadening of the image in the interstellar medium and the finite
achievable telescope resolution, we show that the shadow of Sgr A* may be
observable with very long-baseline interferometry at sub-millimeter
wavelengths, assuming that the accretion flow is optically thin in this region
of the spectrum. Hence, there exists a realistic expectation of imaging the
event horizon of a black hole within the next few years.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure (color), (AAS)Tex, to appear in The Astrophysical
Journal Letters, Vol. 528, L13 (Jan 1, 2000 issue); also available at
http://www.mpifr-bonn.mpg.de/staff/hfalcke/publications.html#bhimag
Radio emission from cosmic ray air showers: simulation results and parametrization
We have developed a sophisticated model of the radio emission from extensive
air showers in the scheme of coherent geosynchrotron radiation, providing a
theoretical foundation for the interpretation of experimental data from current
and future experiments. Having verified the model through comparison of
analytic calculations, Monte Carlo simulations and historical experimental
data, we now present the results of extensive simulations performed with our
Monte Carlo code. Important results are the absence of significant asymmetries
in the total field strength emission pattern, the spectral dependence of the
radiation, the polarization characteristics of the emission (allowing an
unambiguous test of the geomagnetic emission mechanism), and the dependence of
the radio emission on important air shower and observer parameters such as the
shower zenith angle, the primary particle energy, the depth of the shower
maximum and the observer position. An analytic parametrization incorporating
the aforementioned dependences summarizes our results in a particularly useful
way.Comment: 33 pages, 24 figures, final version as accepted for publication by
Astropart. Physics, only minor updates since V
The Intrinsic Size of Sagittarius A* from 0.35 cm to 6 cm
We present new high-resolution observations of Sagittarius A* at wavelengths
of 17.4 to 23.8 cm with the Very Large Array in A configuration with the Pie
Town Very Long Baseline Array antenna. We use the measured sizes to calibrate
the interstellar scattering law and find that the major axis size of the
scattering law is smaller by ~6% than previous estimates. Using the new
scattering law, we are able to determine the intrinsic size of Sgr A* at
wavelengths from 0.35 cm to 6 cm using existing results from the VLBA. The new
law increases the intrinsic size at 0.7 cm by ~20% and <5% at 0.35 cm. The
intrinsic size is 13^{+7}_{-3} Schwarzschild radii at 0.35 cm and is
proportional to lambda^gamma, where gamma is in the range 1.3 to 1.7.Comment: ApJL, in pres
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