Some Intrinsic Properties of Parsec-scale Radio Jets

1996 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 103-105
Author(s):  
Steven J. Tingay

AbstractA simple model for estimating the intrinsic flow direction and speed in the parsec-scale jets associated with extragalactic radio sources is presented. In this model, radio source brightness asymmetries are attributed to the apparent amplification caused when a relativistic jet of radiating material is somewhat aligned with the observers line of sight. The knots of emission commonly seen in parsec-scale radio jets are interpreted as shocks in the relativistic fluid.

1999 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 124-129 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. A. Jackson

AbstractPowerful extragalactic radio sources are characterised by kpc-scale synchrotron emission associated with highly-collimated outflows of relativistic plasma. It is hypothesised that this outflowing plasma is powered by accretion processes concomitant with a central massive black hole. The radio morphologies of these sources comprise jets, lobes and for the most powerful sources, hotspots. At first sight, powerful extragalactic radio sources are a mixed group of objects, with the result that only some gross property delineates them further (e.g. steep-spectrum or flat-spectrum). However, there is accumulating observational evidence which suggests that it is the orientation of the radio axis to our line of sight that dictates their observed characteristics. This orientation dependence has been incorporated into ‘unified schemes’, which physically link apparently disparate radio source types via the random orientation of a ‘parent’ population on the plane of the sky. This paper summarises the ‘dual-population unified scheme’ paradigm investigated by Wall & Jackson (1997) and Jackson & Wall (1999) and discusses some of its implications with respect to radio source cosmology.


1977 ◽  
Vol 74 ◽  
pp. 223-235
Author(s):  
E. M. Burbidge

Correlations between the radio and optical properties of radio sources have proved elusive and the main conclusion to be drawn from this is that there is a great variety of objects in the universe that emit nonthermal radiation, so that attempts to use these objects for cosmological purposes can be frustrated unless one can find some way of selecting objects that do have common intrinsic properties. Despite this, the search for relations and correlations is interesting quite apart from cosmology, because such correlations should provide a groundwork for a physical theory or theories of what is really happening in sources of nonthermal radiation.


1984 ◽  
Vol 110 ◽  
pp. 29-30 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Preuss ◽  
W. Alef ◽  
N. Whyborn ◽  
P.N. Wilkinson ◽  
K.I. Kellermann

3C147 is a compact (≲1″), steep spectrum radio source identified with a quasar at z = 0.545 (0″.001 = 7.4 pc; c/Ho = 6000 Mpc and qo = 0.5). The radio structure shown by VLBI observations at 18 cm (Readhead & Wilkinson, 1980; Simon et al., this volume), at 50 cm (Wilkinson et al., 1977), and at 90 cm (Simon et al., 1980 and 1983) shows a bright ‘core’ (60 pc at one end of a ‘jet’ ~0″.2 (1.5 kpc) in length oriented in p.a. ~ −130°. In this sense 3C147 is typical of the one-sided ‘core-jet’ structures commonly found in the centres of other extragalactic radio sources. However, MERLIN observations at 6 cm (Wilkinson, this vol.) and VLA observations at 2 cm (Crane & Kellermann, unpubl.; Readhead et al., 1980) show a larger elongated feature extending ~0″.5 (3.7 kpc) to the North East of the bright core in p.a. ~25° or on the opposite side to the 0″.2 jet.


1998 ◽  
Vol 184 ◽  
pp. 401-402
Author(s):  
J. M. Marr ◽  
F. Crawford ◽  
G. B. Taylor

The radio source 0108 + 388 is a canonical example of a class of extragalactic radio sources, referred to as Gigahertz-Peaked Spectrum (GPS) sources, whose spectra peak at high frequencies. There are two competing models for the cause of the high frequency turnover: free-free absorption (f-f) of the lower frequency radiation by ionized gas in the host galaxies (e.g. van Breugel 1984), or synchrotron self-absorption (SSA) due to exceptionally large magnetic fields, (e.g. Hodges, Mutel, & Phillips 1984).


1982 ◽  
Vol 97 ◽  
pp. 47-49 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lawrence Rudnick

Examination of the structures of extragalactic radio sources shows a distinct asymmetry in addition to the more general symmetries which are well known. The most likely explanation for the observed asymmetries is that ejection from the active nucleus occurs in only one direction at a time. This direction then switches back and forth to form the large scale double structures. Implications of this picture for the nuclear engine and the radio source environment are discussed.


2016 ◽  
Vol 25 (11) ◽  
pp. 1640009 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcella Massardi ◽  
Vincenzo Galluzzi ◽  
Rosita Paladino ◽  
Carlo Burigana

Radio source observations play important roles in polarimetric cosmological studies. On the one hand, they constitute the main foregrounds for cosmic microwave background (CMB) radiation on scales smaller than 30 arcmin up to 100 GHz, on the other they can be used as targets for validation of products of polarimetric experiments dedicated to cosmology. Furthermore, extragalactic high-redshift sources have been used for cosmic polarization rotation (CPR) investigation. In this paper, we will discuss the support to cosmological studies from ground-based polarimetric observations in the radio and millimetric wavelength bands. Most of the limits to accuracy improvements arise from systematic effects and low calibration quality. We will discuss some details of interferometric calibration procedures and show some of the perspectives that the Atacama large millimeter array (ALMA) could offer for CPR studies.


1990 ◽  
Vol 139 ◽  
pp. 327-332
Author(s):  
J. V. Wall

The background of discrete extragalactic radio sources is described from the point of view of its simplest properties: surface density and surface distribution. New considerations, particularly with regard to the latter, open the possibility of detecting Universal structure on many angular scales. At the same time, these considerations imply the need for greater sophistication in the interpretation of source counts and of the microwave background (MWBG) fluctuations.


1996 ◽  
Vol 175 ◽  
pp. 331-332
Author(s):  
B.R. Mcnamara

The centers of dominant cluster galaxies in cooling flows are often unusually blue, they have spatially extended nebular line emission and bright, FR I radio sources (Fabian 1994). As a class, they are the most rapidly evolving giant elliptical galaxies known. Among the most interesting of these objects, the Abell 1795 (z = 0.06) and Abell 2597 (z = 0.08) central cluster galaxies have very blue, lobe-like structures that are located along their FR I radio lobes (McNamara & O'Connell 1993). This discovery was surprising because correlations between the radio source and blue optical continuum were thought to occur exclusively in powerful, FR II radio galaxies at redshifts z > 0.6 that show the alignment effect. By analogy with the distant radio galaxies, the blue lobes are thought to be regions of star formation that were triggered by the passage of the radio source (De Young 1995), or scattered light from an obscured, anisotropically radiating active nucleus that is beaming its light obliquely to the line of sight (Sarazin & Wise 1993; Crawford & Fabian 1993; Sarazin et al. 1995). Scattered light is usually polarized. Therefore, polarization measurements of the aligned optical continuum should provide a strong test of the scattering hypothesis.McNamara et al. (1995) have obtained U-band polarimetry of the blue lobes in the Abell 1795 cluster central galaxy. They found an upper limit to the degree of polarization of the light emitted from the lobes of < 7%. The accuracy of this measurement is limited by the presence of diluting background starlight. This limit is inconsistent with the lobes being scattered light that originated in an obscured, anisotropically radiating nucleus, unless the radiation is beamed and is viewed at an angle < 22° to the line of sight, which is unlikely. The absence of a detailed correspondence between the radio lobes and optical lobes and the absence of a polarized signal is also inconsistent with synchrotron light.The blue optical lobes are probably regions of vigorous star formation. If a burst of star formation were triggered by the expanding radio lobes, the age of the burst population should be ≃ 107 yr. The star formation rate in both lobes, assuming the Local IMF, would then be ≃ 20 M⊙ yr–1 and the stellar mass of the lobes would be ≃ 108 M⊙. The large cooling flow in A1795 may be fueling the star formation and the radio source or the fuel may have originated from one or more gaseous cluster galaxies that recently fell into the cluster's core. This result strongly suggests that the radio sources in central cluster galaxies may be a significant factor driving the evolution of their stellar populations.


1986 ◽  
Vol 109 ◽  
pp. 157-162
Author(s):  
C. Ma

A celestial coordinate frame defined by extragalactic radio sources has been developed from Mark III VLBI data. 33 000 delay and delay rate pairs acquired between August 1979 and December 1982 have been analyzed to give positions for 82 radio sources. Standard J2000.0 astronomical models were applied. 90% of the formal errors for arc lengths between sources are less than Arc lengths estimated from separate one-year data sets are consistent at the to level.


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