학술논문

Proper Motions in the sub-kiloparsec Jet of 3C 78: Novel Constraints on the Physical Nature of Relativistic Jets
Document Type
Working Paper
Source
Subject
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies
Language
Abstract
Jets from active galactic nuclei are thought to play a role in the evolution of their host and local environments, but a detailed prescription is limited by the understanding of the jets themselves. Proper motion studies of compact bright components in radio jets can be used to produce model-independent constraints on their Lorentz factor, necessary to understand the quantity of energy deposited in the inter-galactic medium. We present our initial work on the jet of radio-galaxy 3C~78, as part of CAgNVAS (Catalogue of proper motions in Active galactic Nuclei using Very Large Array Studies), with a goal of constraining nature of jet plasma on larger ($>100$ parsec) scales. In 3C~78 we find three prominent knots (A, B and C), where knot B undergoes subluminal longitudinal motion ($\sim0.6c$ at $\sim$ 200 pc), while knot C undergoes extreme (apparent) backward motion and eventual forward motion ($\sim-2.6c$, $0.5c$, at $\sim$ 300 pc). Assuming knots are shocks, we infer the bulk speeds from the pattern motion of Knots B and C. We model the spectral energy distribution (SED) of the large-scale jet and observe that a physically motivated two-zone model can explain most of the observed emission. We also find that the jet profile remains approximately conical from parsec to kiloparsec scales. Using the parsec-scale speed from VLBI studies ($\sim0.1c$) and the derived bulk speeds, we find that the jet undergoes bulk acceleration between the parsec and the kiloparsec scales providing the first direct evidence of jet acceleration in a conical and matter-dominated jet.
Comment: 18 pages, 14 figures; Accepted for publication in MNRAS