We reanalyze the deep Chandra observations of the M87 jet, first examined by
Wilson & Yang (2002). By employing an analysis chain that includes image
deconvolution, knots HST-1 and I are fully separated from adjacent emission. We
find slight but significant variations in the spectral shape, with values of
αx ranging from ∼1.2−1.6. We use VLA radio observations, as well
as HST imaging and polarimetry data, to examine the jet's broad-band spectrum
and inquire as to the nature of particle acceleration in the jet. As shown in
previous papers, a simple continuous injection model for synchrotron-emitting
knots, in which both the filling factor, facc, of regions within which
particles are accelerated and the energy spectrum of the injected particles are
constant, cannot account for the X-ray flux or spectrum. Instead, we propose
that facc is a function of position and energy and find that in the inner
jet, facc∝Eγ−0.4±0.2∝Ee−0.2±0.1, and
in knots A and B, facc∝Eγ−0.7±0.2∝Ee−0.35±0.1, where Eγ is the emitted photon energy and and Ee is the
emitting electron energy. In this model, the index p of the injected electron
energy spectrum (n(Ee)∝Ee−p) is p=2.2 at all locations in
the jet, as predicted by models of cosmic ray acceleration by ultrarelativistic
shocks. There is a strong correlation between the peaks of X-ray emission and
minima of optical percentage polarization, i.e., regions where the jet magnetic
field is not ordered. We suggest that the X-ray peaks coincide with shock waves
which accelerate the X-ray emitting electrons and cause changes in the
direction of the magnetic field; the polarization is thus small because of beam
averaging.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ; 21 pages, 9 figures, 2 tables;
abstract shortened for astro-ph; Figures 1, 7 and 8 at reduced resolutio