We present the first 1.3 mm (230 GHz) very long baseline interferometry model
image of an AGN jet using closure phase techniques with a four-element array.
The model image of the quasar 1924-292 was obtained with four telescopes at
three observatories: the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) on Mauna Kea in
Hawaii, the Arizona Radio Observatory's Submillimeter Telescope (SMT) in
Arizona, and two telescopes of the Combined Array for Research in
Millimeterwave Astronomy (CARMA) in California in April 2009. With the greatly
improved resolution compared with previous observations and robust closure
phase measurement, the inner jet structure of 1924-292 was spatially resolved.
The inner jet extends to the northwest along a position angle of −53∘ at
a distance of 0.38\,mas from the tentatively identified core, in agreement with
the inner jet structure inferred from lower frequencies, and making a position
angle difference of ∼80∘ with respect to the cm-jet. The size of
the compact core is 0.15\,pc with a brightness temperature of
1.2×1011\,K. Compared with those measured at lower frequencies, the
low brightness temperature may argue in favor of the decelerating jet model or
particle-cascade models. The successful measurement of closure phase paves the
way for imaging and time resolving Sgr A* and nearby AGN with the Event Horizon
Telescope.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ