Quasar 3C 345 at 18 cm with RadioAstron Virtual Observatory Resource

Authors
  1. Poetzl F.M.
  2. Lobanov A.P.
  3. Ros E.
  4. Gomez J.L.
  5. Bruni G.
  6. Bach U.,Fuentes A.
  7. Gurvits L.I.
  8. Jauncey D.L.
  9. Kovalev Y.Y.
  10. Kravchenko E.V.,Lisakov M.M.
  11. Savolainen T.
  12. Sokolovsky K.V.
  13. Zensus J.A.
  14. Published by
    CDS
Abstract

Supermassive black holes in the centres of radio-loud active galactic nuclei (AGN) can produce collimated relativistic outflows (jets). Magnetic fields are thought to play a key role in the formation and collimation of these jets, but the details are much debated. We study the innermost jet morphology and magnetic field strength in the AGN 3C 345 with an unprecedented resolution using images obtained within the framework of the key science programme on AGN polarisation of the Space VLBI mission RadioAstron. We observed the flat spectrum radio quasar 3C 345 at 1.6GHz on 2016 March 30 with RadioAstron and 18 ground-based radio telescopes in full polarisation mode. Our images, in both total intensity and linear polarisation, reveal a complex jet structure at 300{mu}as as angular resolution, corresponding to a projected linear scale of about 2pc or a few thousand gravitational radii. We identify the synchrotron self-absorbed core at the jet base and find the brightest feature in the jet 1.5 mas downstream of the core. Several polarised components appear in the Space VLBI images that cannot be seen from ground array-only images. Except for the core, the electric vector position angles follow the local jet direction, suggesting a magnetic field perpendicular to the jet. This indicates the presence of plane perpendicular shocks in these regions. Additionally, we infer a minimum brightness temperature at the largest uv-distances of 1.1x10^12^K in the source frame, which is above the inverse Compton limit and an order of magnitude larger than the equipartition value. This indicates locally efficient injection or re-acceleration of particles in the jet to counter the inverse Compton cooling or the geometry of the jet creates significant changes in the Doppler factor, which has to be >11 to explain the high brightness temperatures.

Keywords
  1. quasars
  2. radio-sources
Bibliographic source Bibcode
2021A&A...648A..82P
See also HTML
https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/viz-bin/cat/J/A+A/648/A82
IVOA Identifier IVOID
ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/648/A82
Document Object Identifer DOI
doi:10.26093/cds/vizier.36480082

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History

2021-04-14T08:10:52Z
Resource record created
2021-04-14T08:10:52Z
Created
2022-03-23T16:32:52Z
Updated

Contact

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Postal Address
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