TXS 2013+370 gamma-ray emitting region Virtual Observatory Resource

Authors
  1. Traianou E.
  2. Krichbaum T.P.
  3. Boccardi B.
  4. Angioni R.
  5. Rani B.
  6. Liu J.,Ros E.
  7. Bach U.
  8. Sokolovsky K.V.
  9. Lisakov M.M.
  10. Kiehlmann S.
  11. Gurwell M.,Zensus J.A.
  12. Published by
    CDS
Abstract

The gamma-ray production mechanism and its localization in blazars are still a matter of debate. The main goal of this paper is to constrain the location of the high-energy emission in the blazar TXS 2013+370 and to study the physical and geometrical properties of the inner jet region on sub-pc scales. TXS 2013+370 was monitored during 2002-2013 with VLBI at 15, 22, 43, and 86GHz, which allowed us to image the jet base with an angular resolution of >=0.4pc. By employing CLEAN imaging and Gaussian model-fitting, we performed a thorough kinematic analysis at multiple frequencies, which provided estimates of the jet speed, orientation, and component ejection times. Additionally, we studied the jet expansion profile and used the information on the jet geometry to estimate the location of the jet apex. VLBI data were combined with single-dish measurements to search for correlated activity between the radio, mm, and gamma-ray emission. For this purpose, we employed a cross-correlation analysis, supported by several significance tests. The high-resolution VLBI imaging revealed the existence of a spatially bent jet, described by co-existing moving emission features and stationary features. New jet features, labeled as A1, N, and N1, are observed to emerge from the core, accompanied by flaring activity in radio/mm- bands and rays. The analysis of the transverse jet width profile constrains the location of the mm core to lie <=2pc downstream of the jet apex, and also reveals the existence of a transition from parabolic to conical jet expansion at a distance of ~54pc from the core, corresponding to ~1.5x10^6^ Schwarzschild radii. The cross-correlation analysis of the broad-band variability reveals a strong correlation between the radio-mm and gamma-ray data, with the 1mm emission lagging 49 days behind the rays. Based on this, we infer that the high energy emission is produced at a distance of the order of ~1pc from the VLBI core, suggesting that the seed photon fields for the external Compton mechanism originate either in the dusty torus or in the broad-line region.

Keywords
  1. BL Lacertae objects
  2. Gamma-ray astronomy
  3. Very long baseline interferometry
Bibliographic source Bibcode
2020A&A...634A.112T
See also HTML
https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/viz-bin/cat/J/A+A/634/A112
IVOA Identifier IVOID
ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/634/A112
Document Object Identifer DOI
doi:10.26093/cds/vizier.36340112

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History

2020-02-19T08:05:20Z
Resource record created
2020-02-19T08:05:20Z
Created
2020-08-19T13:05:10Z
Updated

Contact

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CDS support team
Postal Address
CDS, Observatoire de Strasbourg, 11 rue de l'Universite, F-67000 Strasbourg, France
E-Mail
cds-question@unistra.fr