2012ApJ...748...81K


Query : 2012ApJ...748...81K

2012ApJ...748...81K - Astrophys. J., 748, 81 (2012/April-1)

Chandra and HST imaging of the quasars PKS B0106+013 and 3C 345: inverse Compton x-rays and magnetized jets.

KHARB P., LISTER M.L., MARSHALL H.L. and HOGAN B.S.

Abstract (from CDS):

We present results from deep (∼70 ks) Chandra/ACIS observations and Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Advanced Camera for Surveys F475W observations of two highly optically polarized quasars belonging to the MOJAVE blazar sample, viz., PKS B0106+013 and 1641+399 (3C 345). These observations reveal X-ray and optical emissions from the jets in both sources. X-ray emission is detected from the entire length of the 0106+013 radio jet, which shows clear bends or wiggles–the X-ray emission is brightest at the first prominent kiloparsec jet bend. A picture of a helical kiloparsec jet with the first kiloparsec-scale bend representing a jet segment moving close(r) to our line of sight, and getting Doppler boosted at both radio and X-ray frequencies, is consistent with these observations. The X-ray emission from the jet end, however, peaks at about 0".4 (∼3.4 kpc) upstream of the radio hot spot. Optical emission is detected both at the X-ray jet termination peak and at the radio hot spot. The X-ray jet termination peak is found upstream of the radio hot spot by around 0".2 (∼1.3 kpc) in the short projected jet of 3C 345. HST optical emission is seen in an arc-like structure coincident with the bright radio hot spot, which we propose is a sharp (apparent) jet bend instead of a terminal point, that crosses our line of sight and consequently has a higher Doppler beaming factor. A weak radio hot spot is indeed observed less than 1'' downstream of the bright radio hot spot, but has no optical or X-ray counterpart. By making use of the parsec-scale radio and the kiloparsec-scale radio/X-ray data, we derive constraints on the jet Lorentz factors (Γjet) and inclination angles (θ): for a constant jet speed from parsec to kiloparsec scales, we obtain a Γjet of ∼70 for 0106+013 and ∼40 for 3C 345. On relaxing this assumption, we derive a Γjet of ∼2.5 for both the sources. Upper limits on θ of ∼13° are obtained for the two quasars. Broadband (radio-optical-X-ray) spectral energy distribution (SED) modeling of individual jet components in both quasars suggests that the optical emission is from the synchrotron mechanism, while the X-rays are produced via the inverse Compton mechanism from relativistically boosted cosmic microwave background seed photons. The locations of the upstream X-ray termination peaks strongly suggest that the sites of bulk jet deceleration lie upstream (by a few kiloparsecs) of the radio hot spots in these quasars. These regions are also the sites of shocks or magnetic field dissipation, which reaccelerate charged particles and produce high-energy optical and X-ray photons. This is consistent with the best-fit SED modeling parameters of magnetic field strength and electron power-law indices being higher in the jet termination regions compared to the cores. The shocked jet regions upstream of the radio hot spots, the kiloparsec-scale jet wiggles and a "nose cone"-like jet structure in 0106+013, and the V-shaped radio structure in 3C 345, are all broadly consistent with instabilities associated with Poynting-flux-dominated jets. A greater theoretical understanding and more sensitive numerical simulations of jets spanning parsec to kiloparsec scales are needed, however, to make direct quantitative comparisons.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): galaxies: active - galaxies: jets - quasars: individual (0106+013, 3C 345) - radio continuum: general - X-rays: galaxies

Simbad objects: 11

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Number of rows : 11
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 4C 01.02 Bla 01 08 38.77110544 +01 35 00.3171844   18.54 18.39 19.05   ~ 544 1
2 ATO J146.9381+07.4223 Sy1 09 47 45.1433922288 +07 25 20.595729756   17.37 16.95     ~ 375 0
3 4C 20.24 Bla 10 58 17.9007317832 +19 51 50.872721328   17.51 17.07 17.28   ~ 221 1
4 Mrk 421 BLL 11 04 27.3140835504 +38 12 31.798495872   13.50 12.90 8.31   ~ 2675 1
5 3C 273 BLL 12 29 06.6998257176 +02 03 08.597629980   13.05 14.830 14.11   ~ 5804 1
6 NAME Her B Sy1 16 42 58.80997043 +39 48 36.9939552   16.81 16.59 16.84   ~ 1725 2
7 2C 1473 AGN 17 20 28.1680537512 -00 58 46.582453920   15.36       ~ 324 1
8 ICRF J184208.9+794617 Sy1 18 42 08.9904975672 +79 46 17.127835104   16.06 15.38     ~ 1316 0
9 ICRF J204237.3+750802 Sy1 20 42 37.3079247456 +75 08 02.445851940     14.46 13.80   ~ 257 0
10 ICRF J210501.1-484846 AGN 21 05 01.1578152912 -48 48 46.525317156   19.0       ~ 34 1
11 LEDA 68751 Sy1 22 23 49.5400938871 -02 06 12.859452336   16.93 15.77 16.02   ~ 484 2

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