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On the nature of On the nature of High High Frequency Frequency Peaker Peaker radio sources radio sources Monica Orienti Girdwood, 22/05/2007 Monica Orienti – Extragalactic Jets (INAF – IRA, Bologna) Daniele Dallacasa (UniBo, Bologna)
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On the nature of High Frequency Peaker radio sources Monica Orienti Girdwood, 22/05/2007 Monica Orienti – Extragalactic Jets (INAF – IRA, Bologna) Daniele.

Jan 17, 2018

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Peaks > 5 GHz; t ~ years Bright HFP sample consists of 55 objects: 10 galaxies; 34 quasars; 5 BL Lacs; 6 Empty Fields (Dallacasa et al. 2000) High Frequency Peakers A sample of young HFP
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Page 1: On the nature of High Frequency Peaker radio sources Monica Orienti Girdwood, 22/05/2007 Monica Orienti – Extragalactic Jets (INAF – IRA, Bologna) Daniele.

On the nature of On the nature of High High FrequencyFrequency Peaker Peaker

radio sourcesradio sourcesMonica Orienti

Girdwood, 22/05/2007 Monica Orienti – Extragalactic Jets

(INAF – IRA, Bologna)

Daniele Dallacasa (UniBo, Bologna)

Page 2: On the nature of High Frequency Peaker radio sources Monica Orienti Girdwood, 22/05/2007 Monica Orienti – Extragalactic Jets (INAF – IRA, Bologna) Daniele.

The GoalsThe Goals

• Analysis of the variability, morphology and polarization of candidate HFPs;

• Selection of a sample of genuine young HFPs;

• What can we learn from HFPs?

Page 3: On the nature of High Frequency Peaker radio sources Monica Orienti Girdwood, 22/05/2007 Monica Orienti – Extragalactic Jets (INAF – IRA, Bologna) Daniele.

Peaks > 5 GHz;t ~ 102 - 103 years

Bright HFP sample consists of55 objects:• 10 galaxies;• 34 quasars;• 5 BL Lacs;• 6 Empty Fields

(Dallacasa et al. 2000)

High Frequency PeakersHigh Frequency PeakersA sample of young HFPA sample of young HFP

Page 4: On the nature of High Frequency Peaker radio sources Monica Orienti Girdwood, 22/05/2007 Monica Orienti – Extragalactic Jets (INAF – IRA, Bologna) Daniele.

Contamination from BL Lac objectsContamination from BL Lac objects

Young radio sources

• No flux-density variability;

• “Double/Triple” structure;• Unpolarized

Blazars

• Strong flux density variability;

• Core-Jet structure;• Significantly polarized

Blazars may display the characteristics of young radio sources when their emission is dominated by a flare in the jet-base.

A sample of young HFPA sample of young HFP

Page 5: On the nature of High Frequency Peaker radio sources Monica Orienti Girdwood, 22/05/2007 Monica Orienti – Extragalactic Jets (INAF – IRA, Bologna) Daniele.

Multi-frequency VLA observationsMulti-frequency VLA observations

• Galaxies V<3;

• 21 sources (18 quasars and 3 BL Lacs) V >>3;

• 12 quasars no longer show a peaked spectrum;

4 epochs of VLA observations at 9 frequencies ( 1.4 – 43 GHz)

(Si – Si)2

V= 1m

i = 1

m

i

A sample of young HFPA sample of young HFP

Page 6: On the nature of High Frequency Peaker radio sources Monica Orienti Girdwood, 22/05/2007 Monica Orienti – Extragalactic Jets (INAF – IRA, Bologna) Daniele.

VLBA observationsVLBA observations

Two-frequencies VLBA observations In the optically-thin part of the spectrum

We find that:• 27% “Double/Triple” morphology;• 12% “Core-Jet” morphology;• 61% Unresolved

Orienti et al. 2006a, A&A, 450, 959

=0.2

A sample of young HFPA sample of young HFP

Page 7: On the nature of High Frequency Peaker radio sources Monica Orienti Girdwood, 22/05/2007 Monica Orienti – Extragalactic Jets (INAF – IRA, Bologna) Daniele.

Polarization propertiesPolarization properties

From simultaneous VLA observations at 4.5, 8.4, 15 and 22 GHz + information from the NVSS at 1.4 GHz, we find:

• 57% have fractional polarization >1%;• 36% are completely unpolarized;• All the galaxies are unpolarized;• 70% of quasars are highly-polarized.

A sample of young HFPA sample of young HFP

Page 8: On the nature of High Frequency Peaker radio sources Monica Orienti Girdwood, 22/05/2007 Monica Orienti – Extragalactic Jets (INAF – IRA, Bologna) Daniele.

ResultsResultsFrom the flux density variability, morphology and polarization wefind that: Quasars are: Variable; “Core-Jet” morphology; Polarized emission (>1%).

Galaxies are: No Variability “Double-Triple” morphology

Unpolarized or slightly (<1%) polarized

Only 25 from the HFP sample are still young radio source candidates

A sample of young HFPA sample of young HFP

Page 9: On the nature of High Frequency Peaker radio sources Monica Orienti Girdwood, 22/05/2007 Monica Orienti – Extragalactic Jets (INAF – IRA, Bologna) Daniele.

HFPs and the source growthHFPs and the source growth

Strong flux-density and arm-length asymmetries in compact (< 15 kpc) radio sources

Constraining the radio source evolutionConstraining the radio source evolution

Page 10: On the nature of High Frequency Peaker radio sources Monica Orienti Girdwood, 22/05/2007 Monica Orienti – Extragalactic Jets (INAF – IRA, Bologna) Daniele.

The evolution modelThe evolution modelThe source growth in an ambient medium with a King-like profile:

Asymmetries cannot be

reproduced

v t -1/2 (NLR)

Const (ISM)

L t 5/8 (NLR)

t -1/2 (ISM)

ncl

n0

n r -β

t3 t2 t1 t0 t1 t2 t3

Jet-cloud interaction:

ncl

n0Lj,c l

9 8

2ncl

n0vj,c v

Constraining the radio source evolutionConstraining the radio source evolution

Page 11: On the nature of High Frequency Peaker radio sources Monica Orienti Girdwood, 22/05/2007 Monica Orienti – Extragalactic Jets (INAF – IRA, Bologna) Daniele.

Magnetic fieldMagnetic fieldFrom equipartition:

Heq ~ 0.16 G

Direct measurement:

H ~ 0.150.03 G

From X-ray luminosities:

H ~ 0.14 G

Consistent with a source in equipartition condition with X-ray luminosity due to Synchrotron Self-Compton

Constraining the physical conditionsConstraining the physical conditions

RXJ1459+3337