Issue |
A&A
Volume 520, September-October 2010
|
|
---|---|---|
Article Number | A62 | |
Number of page(s) | 11 | |
Section | Extragalactic astronomy | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201014418 | |
Published online | 04 October 2010 |
Radio-optical scrutiny of compact AGN:
correlations between properties of pc-scale jets and optical
nuclear emission![[*]](/icons/foot_motif.png)
T. G. Arshakian1 - J. Torrealba2 - V. H. Chavushyan3 - E. Ros1,4 - M. L. Lister5 - I. Cruz-González2 - J. A. Zensus1
1 - Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie, Auf dem Hügel 69, 53121
Bonn, Germany
2 - Instituto de Astronomía, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México,
Apartado Postal 70-264, 04510 México D.F., México
3 - Instituto Nacional de Astrofísica Óptica y Electrónica, Apartado
Postal 51 y 216, 72000 Puebla, Pue, México
4 - Departament d'Astronomia i Astrofísica, Universitat de València,
46100 Burjassot, Spain
5 - Department of Physics, Purdue University, 525 Northwestern Avenue,
West Lafayette, IN 47907, USA
Received 12 March 2010 / Accepted 20 May
2010
Abstract
Aims. We study the correlations between the VLBA
(Very Long Baseline Array) radio emission at 15 GHz, extended
emission at 151 MHz, and optical nuclear emission at
5100 Å for a complete sample of 135 compact jets.
Methods. We use the partial Kendall's tau
correlation analysis to check the link between radio properties of
parsec-scale jets and optical nuclear luminosities of host active
galactic nuclei (AGN).
Results. We find a significant positive correlation
for 99 quasars between optical nuclear luminosities and total radio
(VLBA) luminosities of unresolved cores at 15 GHz originated
at milliarcseconds scales. For 18 BL Lacs, the optical
continuum emission correlates with the radio emission of the jet at
15 GHz. We suggest that the radio and optical emission are
beamed and originate in the innermost part of the sub-parsec-scale jet
in quasars. Analysis of the relation between the apparent speed of the
jet and the optical nuclear luminosity at 5100 Å supports the
relativistic beaming model for the optical emission generated in the
jet, and allows the peak values of the intrinsic optical luminosity of
the jet and its Lorentz factor to be estimated for the populations of
quasars (
W Hz-1
and
),
BL Lacs (
W Hz-1
and
),
and radio galaxies (
W Hz-1
and
).
The radio-loudness of quasars (the ratio of 15 GHz flux
density and optical nuclear flux at 5100 Å) is found to
increase at high redshifts, which is interpreted as progressively
higher Doppler factors in radio regime compared to those in optical. A
strong positive correlation is found between the intrinsic kinetic
power of the jet (measured from the flux density at 151 MHz)
and the apparent luminosities of the total and the unresolved core
emission of the jet at 15 GHz. This correlation is interpreted
in terms of an intrinsically more luminous parsec-scale jet producing
more luminous extended structure, which is detectable at low radio
frequencies, 151 MHz. A possibility that the low frequency
radio emission is relativistically beamed in superluminal sources and
therefore correlates with radio luminosity of the jet at
15 GHz cannot be ruled out. Monitoring of superluminal AGN in
a wide range of frequencies is required to check the contribution of
each effect.
Key words: galaxies: active - quasars: general - galaxies: jets
1 Introduction
The orientation-based unification schemes of radio-loud active galactic nuclei (AGN) (Urry & Padovani 1995; Barthel 1989) suggest that the continuum and broad-line emission from their central engine are seen directly in powerful FR II (Fanaroff & Riley 1974) quasars, while in FR II radio galaxies the central emission can be partially/completely hidden by obscuring material (``dusty torus''). In this scheme the presence of relativistic jets implies that radio-loud quasars are the relativistically beamed counterparts of radio galaxies. The beamed synchrotron emission from the base of the jet may extend to optical wavelengths in quasars (Impey & Tapia 1990) and even in the relatively unbeamed radio galaxies (Chiaberge et al. 2002; Hardcastle & Worrall 2000). We should expect that in quasars the emission from both the central engine (thermal?) and the jet (non-thermal) contribute to the total power, whereas in radio galaxies the bulk of the optical continuum emission may be attributed to the relativistic jet rather than the central engine hidden by the torus (e.g., Arshakian et al. 2010; León-Tavares et al. 2010).
One approach to investigate the physical processes in active
galactic nuclei (AGN) at scales not
reachable by present-day telescopes is to study the correlations
between radiative energy in different wavebands. There is evidence that
the beamed synchrotron emission from the base of the radio jet extends
to visible
wavelengths in BL Lacs and quasars (Wills
et al. 1992). Several authors (Chiaberge
et al. 2002; Kharb & Shastri 2004; Hardcastle
& Worrall 2000) investigated the correlations
between the radio and optical regimes for radio-loud FRI-FRII radio
galaxies with the sample size 65 objects. On the basis of the
correlations between unresolved optical core emission (in the
high-resolution images with the Hubble Space Telescope)
and the VLA (Very Large Array) radio core emission of the jet on scales
of milliarcseconds (see Hardcastle
& Worrall 2000), and color
information, these authors argued that optical nuclei are due to
synchrotron radiation from the jet. The VLBI (Very Long Baseline
Interferometry) imaging of jets at 15 GHz reaches an
unprecedented milliarcsecond resolution (Zensus et al. 2002; Kellermann
et al. 2004,1998) and the VLBI cores are
resolved on submilliarcsecond scales (Kovalev
et al. 2005). The VLBA provides a high reliability
in the results due to the excellent calibration properties and the
repeatability of observations. Here we investigate the radio-optical
correlation between the VLBA core emission at 15 GHz and the
optical nuclear emission at 5100 Å to test a single production
mechanism for radio and optical continuum emission on scales of
submilliarcseconds.
The relativistic outflows of plasma material form near the central nucleus and trace the pc-scale broad-line region and kpc-scale narrow-line region transporting the kinetic energy preserved in the jet to hundreds of kiloparsecs away from the central engine. To test the link between the properties of the pc-scale jet and extended radio structure on kiloparsec scales, as well as the correlation between VLBI radio and optical nuclear luminosities we use the complete sample of 135 core-dominated AGN possessing relativistic jets (Lister & Homan 2005).
In Sect. 2 we introduce the radio sample of AGN, and in Sect. 3 we define the radio parameters of their compact jets. The optical nuclear luminosities are derived in Sect. 4. Correlations between radio properties of the jet, and between radio properties and optical nuclear luminosities are discussed in Sects. 5 and 6 respectively.
Throughout the paper a flat cosmology model is used with
(
)
and H0=70 km s-1 Mpc-1.
2 The sample of compact AGN
To analyze the correlations between optical continuum emission and the characteristics of radio jets on sub-parsec scales we use the complete statistical sample of compact AGN sources (Lister & Homan 2005) and the sample of 250 compact extragalactic radio sources at 15 GHz compiled by Kovalev et al. (2005). The samples consist of compact AGN from the MOJAVE (Monitoring of Jets in AGN with VLBA Experiments) program and the VLBA 15 GHz monitoring survey. The MOJAVE-1 sample is a flux-density limited complete sample of 135 AGN with redshifts reaching up to 3.4. Most of the MOJAVE-1 AGN have flat spectra and their total flux density at 15 GHz is greater than 1.5 Jy for sources in the Northern hemisphere (

This complete sample is used to infer relationships between optical luminosity and properties of compact jet. These relations are also checked for the full sample of 250 AGN, which includes additional compact AGN of special interest that did not meet the criteria of the complete sample. The full sample of 250 AGN includes 188 quasars, 36 BL Lacs, 20 radio galaxies, and 6 sources with no optical identification.
Biases of the sample. According to the relativistic beaming model, the intrinsic flux density of the relativistic jet is enhanced toward the jet direction by relativistic Doppler beaming effect. The beamed emission appears to be stronger at small viewing angles of the jet (Cohen et al. 2007; Pearson & Zensus 1987). Compact jets with high intrinsic radio luminosities can be seen at larger viewing angles, while the intrinsically faint jets fade away at larger viewing angles and are not included in the sample. In combination with the jet speed, this effect introduces a bias towards fast and bright jets to be oriented near to the line of sight. At small angles we should have a wider range of Lorentz factors and intrinsic radio luminosities, while at large angles only slow and intrinsically bright jets are included. Low-redshift, bright sources can also have large viewing angles evidenced by two-sided compact jets.
The sample of compact radio jets compiled by a flux limit has various selection effects, which arise from a combination of intrinsic luminosity, luminosity distance, and Doppler factor. Monte Carlo simulations of flux-limited, beamed samples suggest that the mean Doppler factor does not generally increase with redshift (Lister & Marscher 1997). For low redshifts (z<0.6), there is a deficit of high-Doppler factor, low viewing angle sources since they are rare in the population; the volume element at low-z is small, and these sources are close enough that they do not need to be as beamed to be in included the flux-limited sample. Basically beaming is not as important a factor at lower redshifts in determining the makeup of a flux-limited sample as at high redshifts, z>0.6, according to Lister & Marscher (1997). These authors showed that the viewing angle of the jet has a wide range at low redshifts, while at z>0.6 the mean viewing angle is pretty much constant, as was shown by simulations. Essentially, there is enough range in the intrinsic luminosity function, and the volume is large enough, so that at z>0.6, a combination of slightly less aligned sources with higher intrinsic powers, and vice versa, are included in the flux-limited sample.
The variability Doppler factors (measured from the variability timescales of radio flares at different frequencies; see Hovatta et al. 2009) of about 50% of the MOJAVE blazars were estimated with the total flux density observations obtained with the Metsähovi single-dish 14-meter telescope at 22 GHz and 37 GHz. These observations allow the measurements of variability Doppler factors for all flaring jets to be made, while for jets too compact to be observed with the VLBA at 15 GHz, the apparent speed cannot be measured due to the absence of moving jet components. Around 50% of the MOJAVE-1 core-dominated compact jets have no measurements of Doppler factors (Hovatta et al. 2009), because 53 sources were not monitored or analyzed, and 12 AGN had no detection of moving components (6 BL Lacs and 6 quasars). The jets of later sources are believed to have very small viewing angles. The selection of AGN with known apparent speeds thus should introduce a bias towards larger viewing angles, which can be significant for the sample of 16 BL Lacs with known apparent speeds.
Another issue is the accurate division between BL Lacs and quasars. Kharb et al. (2010) showed that the division of blazars into two subclasses by an emission-line equivalent width of 5 Å is arbitrary in terms of radio jet properties of AGN forming the MOJAVE sample. Some correlation tests for BL Lacs and quasars differ significantly when two subclasses are considered separately, indicating that it is likely that the population of BL Lacs is inhomogeneous and consists of blazars with both FR I and FR II morphological types, while the population of quasars includes only FR II radio galaxies. Other problems relating to the precise delineation between BL Lacs and quasars is discussed in Kovalev et al. (2005). Because we aim to study the radio-optical correlations for a relatively small MOJAVE-1 sample of 135 AGN, and find significant correlations for BL Lacs, quasars and radio galaxies, we adopt the original classification of blazars provided by Véron-Cetty & Véron (2003) to keep the subsamples under investigation large enough to find significant correlations.
3 Parameters of the jet
The relativistic plasma outflows oriented near to the line of sight are
observed as one-sided radio core-jet structures (as seen on VLBA
images) due to relativistic brightening of the radio emission from the
approaching jet, while outflows oriented at large angles present a
two-sided jet structure. The apparent speed of the fastest jet
component is assumed to be equal to the speed of the jet flow.
Kovalev et al. (2005) studied the central regions of 250
compact AGN at 15 GHz. They derived the total flux densities
from each VLBA image (
)
and the flux densities from unresolved, most compact regions of the
VLBA cores (
). The most compact structures
extend at sub-milliarcsecond scales (0.02-0.06 mas). The
uncertainty in
and
is about 5%. The flux density from the extended jet was defined as
,
where
is the VLBA resolved core flux (Kovalev et al. 2005). The
luminosity of the VLBA component, unresolved core, and jet components
are
where S is the flux density of the specified component,










We measure the intrinsic luminosity of the jet for 68 AGN (51
quasars and 12 BL Lacs) using the relation
,
where p=2 for a steady-state jet, appropriate for a
core region, and p=3 for a discrete optically thin
source (Lind & Blandford 1985),
and
for
,
,
and
for
.
The apparent speed of the jet (
in units of the speed of the
light) is measured for 118 AGN (Lister
et al. 2009b,
and MOJAVE website
;
see Table 3). We use the variability Doppler factor of the jet
(
;
Hovatta et al. 2009) to derive the Lorentz factor (
,
where
is the speed of the jet in units of the speed of the light),
![]() |
(2) |
and the viewing angle of the jet
![]() |
(3) |
for 63 AGN from the MOJAVE-1 sample. Note that this value represents the 49% of the total of AGN. We cannot estimate the exact errors of the Lorentz factor and the jet viewing angle, because it is difficult to determine the error estimates of












To measure the power transported by the radio jet to
kiloparsec scales, we used the analytical formula derived by Punsly (2005),
where S151 is the flux density at 151 MHz detected from the extended radio structure (see Table 3),


4 Optical nuclear luminosities of compact AGN
We estimate the optical luminosities of compact radio sources at 5100 Å (L5100) using the B band in the standard Johnson's photometric system (
![]() |
(5) |
where AB is the galactic extinction in the B-band taken from the NASA Extragalactic Database and

MB | = | ![]() |
|
![]() |
(6) |
where h = H0/100 km s-1 Mpc -1 = 0.7,


![]() |
(7) |
where



![]() |
Figure 1:
Left panel: linear transformation between O
MAPS and |
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We have searched for the apparent magnitudes for 250 compact
AGN in two
catalogs: the Minnesota Automated Plate Scanner Catalog of the
Palomar Observatory Sky Survey (POSS I), hereafter the MAPS
Catalog
(Cabanela et al. 2003)
and the US Naval Observatory
USNO-B catalog (Monet et al.
2003). The apparent
magnitudes in the MAPS catalog are given as photographic Omagnitudes,
while the USNO catalog measures B magnitudes.
To convert
the O magnitude from MAPS and the B
USNO to the standard BJ
magnitude
in Johnson's system we used the linear correlations that we found
using the BVR photoelectric photometry for 426
stars in 49 Palomar
Sky Survey fields (Humphreys
et al. 1991). The following expressions are used to
transform the apparent magnitude to the BJ
magnitude:
![]() |
(8) |
and,
![]() |
(9) |
From Fig. 1 we can see that the O MAPS magnitude presents less dispersion than B USNO magnitude with respect to the BJ. Out of 250 sources, we identified 163 AGN in the MAPS catalog, the other 79 remaining sources were found in the USNO catalog, and eight objects have no optical counterparts. Out of 135 sources from the MOJAVE-1 sample, nine sources have no optical counterparts: two quasars, four BL Lacs, and three unclassified objects (see Table 3).
For 123 AGN from the full sample, we have measurements of
monochromatic spectral fluxes at 5100 Å, 3000 Å, and
1350 Å. The spectroscopic observations were carried out at
2.1-m class telescopes OAN-SPM,
GHAO
complemented with
intermediate and high-resolution spectra found in SDSS/HST-FOS
archives, Marziani et al.
(2003b), and Lawrence
et al. (1996). The spectral atlas and the details of
the observations will be published in a forthcoming paper (Torrealba
et al., in preparation).
We scaled the 3000 Å and
1350 Å fluxes to 5100 Å
assuming the spectral index
.
Contribution of optical nuclear emission is dominant for quasars and
BL Lacs, while for radio galaxies the optical emission of the
stellar component can be significant.
Figure 2
(left panel) shows that the photometric fluxes (
)
are on average higher than the spectral fluxes (
), because the contribution of
the host galaxy is larger in photometric fluxes. To correct the
photometric fluxes for a stellar emission, we used the relation between
and
for 123 AGN, excluding the
radio galaxies and eight highly
variable AGN:
Corrected photometric fluxes, measured and estimated spectral fluxes at 5100 Å are presented in Fig. 2 (right panel). Outliers from the equality line are radio galaxies and few quasars. The corrected fluxes of the former are contaminated by the host galaxy emission, while a strong variability of some quasars causes large deviations expected from the equality line.
The corrected optical fluxes and corrected luminosities (or nuclear optical luminosities, hereafter, L5100) are presented in Table 3. The distribution of nuclear optical luminosities of 123 AGN from the MOJAVE-1 sample ranges between 1020 W Hz-1 and 1025.5 W Hz-1 with the maximum at 1024 W Hz-1 (Fig. 3). Optical luminosities of quasars are higher than those of BL Lacs, and the luminosities of the latter are higher than those for radio galaxies. While the optical luminosities are weaker than the total radio luminosities by a three orders of magnitudes, the shapes of distributions of L5100 for quasars, BL Lacs and galaxies are similar to the distributions of total radio luminosities of the compact jets at 15 GHz (Lister & Homan 2005; Kovalev et al. 2005).
![]() |
Figure 2:
Left panel: photometric fluxes against
spectroscopic fluxes scaled to 5100 Å for 123 AGN from the
full sample. Right panel: corrected photometric
fluxes against spectroscopic fluxes at 5100 Å for
the same sample. The dotted line represents the identity. Averaged 1 |
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5 Correlations between radio properties of the jet
Correlations are considered significant for the samples of all
135 sources and 95 quasars if the confidence level ,
while for the sample of 18 BL Lacs the correlations with a
confidence level high than 95% are considered. Partial Kendall's tau
correlation (Akritas &
Siebert 1996) showed that the VLBA luminosities of MOJAVE-1
AGN and the luminosities of their unresolved core and the jet at
15 GHz are correlated at the high confidence level, >
.
These correlations were expected for all types of AGN such as quasars,
BL Lacs and radio galaxies, because the emission from both
unresolved core and jet are expected to be Doppler-boosted.
In the relativistic brightening model the observed radio
emission of the jet is boosted by relativistic Doppler effect, which
depends on the viewing angle ()
and the Lorentz factor (
)
of the jet. Strong negative correlation between
,
,
and
for 48 quasars (Table 1) and for the sample
of 63 AGN (Fig. 4) confirms
that the radio emission from all AGN types suffers from relativistic
beaming. The missing population of compact (core only) jets without
viewing angle (
)
measurements are those aligned to the line-of-sight and should have
populated the right bottom quadrant in Fig. 4. The
ordinary linear-squares method is used to fit this relation for 62 AGN,
excluding three outliers (two quasars and one BL Lac),
![]() |
(11) |
This relation can be used as an independent method for estimating the jet viewing angle from radio luminosity of the jet at 15 GHz.
![]() |
Figure 3: Distribution of corrected photometric optical luminosities at 5100 Å for the sample of 125 AGN for MOJAVE-1 sample ( top panel), 99 quasars, 18 BL Lacs and 8 radio galaxies. |
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No correlation is found between jet luminosities and jet speed
separately for quasars, BL Lacs and radio galaxies. The
average Lorentz factors of quasars and BL Lacs (
and
)
are larger than those for radio galaxies (
). This produces a positive
correlation (
)
in the
plane, which appears to be stronger between
and
(
;
Table 2).
Table 1:
Kendall's
correlation analysis between parameters of the jet, extended radio
structure for all AGN from the MOJAVE-1 sample, quasars and
BL Lacs.
The distribution of the jet kinetic power (
estimated from Eq. (4))
is significantly different for quasars, radio galaxies, and
BL Lacs (Fig. 5). We should
not expect a difference between quasars and radio galaxies as they are
according to the unification scheme the same objects oriented
differently to the line-of-sight. In the MOJAVE sample, the kinetic
power of the jets are found to be higher in quasars than in radio
galaxies. This can be understood as a bias resulting from the flux
limit of the sample: only nearby radio galaxies (z<0.2)
are included in the MOJAVE sample because they are fainter at
15 GHz, while quasars are more luminous and can be detected up
to
.
The negative correlation, at 99.7% confidence level found for all types reflects the fact that BL Lacs and radio galaxies have on the average smaller kinetic powers and larger jet viewing angles than those for the quasars.
We find a strong positive correlation between the kinetic
power of the jet and the apparent luminosity of the jet for
101 quasars and 19 BL Lacs
(Fig. 6).
At first glance it seems to be a surprising result because
is thought to be an orientation-independent parameter, while
or
(
)
depends on the jet viewing angle (see Table 1). As was discussed
in Sect. 2,
more luminous jets are found at high redshifts due to their rarity. The
depends
on the Doppler factor of the jet (or its jet viewing angle and Lorentz
factor) and the intrinsic radio luminosity,
(for a steady-state jet). While progressively smaller jet viewing
angles are detected at high redshifts (see Table 1), the average
Doppler factor does not change much (Lister & Marscher 1997;
Fig. 13 in Hovatta et al. 2009). This indicates that
the high apparent luminosities detected at high redshift are mostly due
to high intrinsic luminosities of the jets. Hence, we should expect
that
correlates with
.
For a sample of 51 quasars, the intrinsic luminosity of the unresolved
core and the jet are found to be correlated with the kinetic power of
the jet at
99%
confidence level. The significance is lower than that found in the
relation plane (see Table 1)
mainly due to about two times smaller sample of AGN with known Doppler
factor values. This positive correlation may reflect that intrinsically
much brighter jets on parsec-scales pump more electrons into the
kiloparsec-scale radio lobes, resulting in a more luminous extended
structure. A larger number of low energy electrons accumulate in the
lobes (because the lifetime of the low energy electrons is much longer)
and emits a low-frequency synchrotron radio emission on scales of
hundreds of kiloparsecs. We suggest that a real positive correlation
between the intrinsic luminosity of the parsec-scale jet and the
kinetic jet power (or luminosity of the extended radio structure) is
reflected in the
relation plane for a given distribution of Lorentz factors of the jet.
![]() |
Figure 4: Viewing angle of the jet against radio luminosity of the VLBA jet at 15 GHz for 48 quasars, 12 BL Lacs, and 5 radio galaxies. |
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We further investigate correlations between
and the intrinsic parameters of the jet (
and
)
measured for
50
AGN. The measured kinetic power should be independent of the jet
viewing angle. This is consistent with the lack of correlation found in
the samples of 48 quasars and 12 BL Lacs
(Table 1).
This correlation becomes significant for 46 quasars (
,
P=0.03) if we exclude two quasars with very small
viewing angles (<0.2 degrees). The lack of large
viewing angles in quasars with low kinetic powers (Fig. 7; bottom panel)
can be explained as a selection imposed by the flux limit:
(a) quasars with large kinetic power can be found at high
redshifts due to their rarity; and (b) at large distances only
the most beamed sources (small viewing angles and intrinsically
luminous) can be included in the sample. These two effects can produce
the negative correlation observed in the
relation plane.
Another possibility to explain this relation is that the radio emission
at 151 MHz is variable and relativistically beamed. In the
minority of the low-frequency variable sources (LFV), the variability
is correlated with that at high frequencies, with events started at
high frequencies and propagated to low frequencies with decreasing
amplitude. This is a signature of intrinsic variability caused by
expansion of the emitting region, which has been confirmed from a
comparison between flux density variability at 408 MHz and
structural changes observed with VLBI observations at 1.67 GHz
in several LFV sources (Bondi
et al. 1996). The majority of sources selected on
the basis of LFV, however, showed no correlation between variability at
low and high frequencies, which has been interpreted in terms of
extrinsic variability due to refractive interstellar scintillation
(e.g., Bondi et al. 1994,
and references therein). Since the MOJAVE sources are selected from
high-frequency radio surveys on the basis of their beamed emission, it
is most likely that the low frequency variability is a result of both
beaming and refractive interstellar scintillation, with the former
being dominant. Coordinated monitoring of MOJAVE blazars across the
wide range of frequencies is needed to explore this issue. To fully
understand all selection effects present in the flux-limited MOJAVE-1
sample and their role in shaping the observed correlations, it would be
helpful to simulate the selection effects and the correlations between
radio parameters.
The Lorentz factors also do not show a significant correlation
with
for quasars and BL Lacs when considered separately (the
significant positive correlation present for the joint sample is a
result of jet power and jet speed being on average larger in
BL Lacs than in quasars).
The relationship between intrinsic jet luminosity and extended lobe power is currently not well-constrained (Lister & Homan 2005). We report a positive correlation found for 51 quasars (98%) between the intrinsic luminosity of the parsec-scale jet and the luminosity of the extended radio structure suggesting that intrinsically bright parsec-scale jets produce luminous radio lobes on scales of hundreds of kiloparsecs.
Table 2:
Kendall's
correlation analysis between radio parameters of the jet and optical
nuclear luminosity at 5100 Å.
Because of the tight correlation between
and
,
the jet kinetic power is also correlated with
(99%) and
(99%).
Positive correlations are found between
and
,
the radio loudness of the jet. This correlation is significant for
99 quasars (
)
and marginally significant for 18 BL Lacs (94%).
![]() |
Figure 5: Distribution of the jet kinetic power for 128 AGN ( top panel): 101 quasars, 19 BL Lacs, and 8 radio galaxies. |
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![]() |
Figure 6:
Jet kinetic power versus apparent luminosity (top panel)
and intrinsic luminosity (middle panel) of the jet
at 15 GHz, and viewing angle of the jet (bottom panel).
Note that the upper limit of errors associated with the jet viewing
angle is |
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![]() |
Figure 7: Jet kinetic power versus apparent speed and radio loudness of the VLBA jet. |
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The kinetic power of the jet depends on the Lorentz factor of
the jet and the mass outflow rate,
,
where c is the speed of the light. This opens a
possibility to measure the mass outflow rate using the independent
measurements of
and
and to use the
as a measure of the accretion rate in superluminal AGN. We
will pursue this study in a separate paper.
6 Optical continuum luminosity and properties of the jet for MOJAVE-1 sources
Compact AGN are strongly variable at 15 GHz and in the optical band (Wold et al. 2007; Kovalev et al. 2005). In our case of non-simultaneous observations, variability can blur possible correlations between radio and optical luminosities.The total radio luminosity of the VLBA jets at 15 GHz against the optical continuum luminosity at 5100 Å for quasars, BL Lacs, and radio galaxies are shown in Fig. 8.
The partial Kendall's tau correlation analysis is used to
investigate correlations between radio and optical luminosities. We
find a significant
positive correlation (>)
between the nuclear optical luminosity of compact AGN and the radio
luminosities of the total VLBA emission, the unresolved core, and the
jet emission for 99 quasars (Fig. 8; Table 2), while for 18
BL Lacs, the optical luminosity correlates positively only
with the jet luminosity at the confidence level of
.
According to the unification scheme for radio-loud AGN, the jet viewing
angles are smaller in BL Lacs than in quasars and it is larger
in radio galaxies, but this picture is not consistent with the average
angles,
,
estimated for quasars, BL Lacs and radio galaxies from the
MOJAVE sample,
deg,
deg and
deg,
respectively. This is most likely a selection effect - BL Lacs
viewed at smaller angles are more compact, and for these we cannot
measure jet viewing angles. This introduces a bias for the sample of
BL Lacs towards larger viewing angles. Ghisellini et al. (2005)
suggested that there is a stratification of velocities in the jet of
BL Lacs. The emission of the fast-spine layer is strongly
boosted into a narrow cone and only the outer lower-speed layers are
detected, which are not representative of the characteristic speed of
the jet, and, hence, of the Doppler factor. This effect, together with
possible misclassification of some BL Lacs and quasars (see Hovatta et al. 2009)
may lead to a bias towards large viewing angles for BL Lacs.
![]() |
Figure 8: Total VLBA luminosity at 15 GHz versus optical nuclear luminosity at 5100 Å for 125 compact AGN. |
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![]() |
Figure 9: Apparent speed of the jet versus optical nuclear luminosity at 5100 Å for 164 AGN from the MOJAVE sample. The sample of AGN consists of 127 quasars (circles), 21 BL Lacs (open squares), and 16 radio galaxies (filled triangles). The aspect curve is given for quasars (dotted and full lines which cover all and 95% of quasars, respectively), BL Lacs (dashed line), and radio galaxies (dot-dashed line). |
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Radio-optical correlations for quasars and BL Lacs can be understood if both radio and optical synchrotron emission originate in the relativistic jet and are Doppler-boosted. The dispersion of the radio-optical correlation can be caused by non-simultaneous observations, distributions of intrinsic luminosities, and Doppler factors. The larger dispersion for BL Lacs could be a result of stronger variability in the radio and optical bands as well as a wider range of intrinsic luminosities, while for radio galaxies the dimming of optical continuum emission by an obscuring dusty torus can vary significantly.
Arshakian et al.
(2010) reported a correlation between the ejected jet
components
and the optical continuum flares in the radio-loud galaxy
3C 390.3. This correlation was confirmed for another radio
galaxy, 3C 120 (León-Tavares
et al. 2010), suggesting that this link is common
for all radio-loud galaxies and radio-loud quasars. The link between
optical continuum variability and kinematics
of the parsec-scale jet is interpreted in terms of optical
flares generated at subparsec-scales in the innermost part of a
relativistic jet (Arshakian
et al. 2010; León-Tavares et al. 2010)
rather than in the accretion disk. This suggests that the bulk of
optical continuum emission is non-thermal and Doppler-boosted. It is
therefore likely that the optical nuclear luminosity is intrinsically
correlated with the radio luminosity of the unresolved core of radio
galaxies and quasars rather than with their jet or accretion
luminosities. For the BL Lacs, the significant correlation
found in the
relation plane suggests that the optical emission is likely to be
generated in the continuos jet.
Another evidence supporting the synchrotron nature of the
optical emission generated in the relativistic jet is coming from the
apparent speed-optical luminosity diagram (Fig. 9). There
is a lack of blazars with low optical luminosities and high apparent
speeds, similar to the absence of sources in the relation between
apparent transverse speed and apparent radio luminosity of the MOJAVE
sources at 15 GHz (Cohen
et al. 2007). This is not a selection effect due to
the observing limit in the MOJAVE-1 sample and it is interpreted in
terms of relativistic beaming of radio jets. The aspect curve, the
relation between
and
for a fixed intrinsic radio luminosity and Lorentz factor of the jet,
derived from the relativistic beaming theory were shown to be a good
envelope for the quasars in the
diagram (Cohen et al. 2007),
suggesting that the relativistic beaming model is realistic for the
MOJAVE blazars.
![]() |
Figure 10: Radio-loudness versus redshift for 125 compact AGN. |
Open with DEXTER |
The good fit of the aspect curve in the
diagram is shown for the whole population of quasars and 95% of the
population (dotted and full lines in Fig. 9). The
good fit of an aspect curve for all quasars suggests the peak values of
the intrinsic optical luminosity
W Hz-1,
,
and p=3 in the population (Fig. 9; dotted
line). However, for the majority of quasars (95%), a better fit can be
achieved with the peak values of
W Hz-1,
,
and p=3. The populations of BL Lacs and
radio galaxies are also nicely enveloped under the aspect curve with
parameters
W Hz-1,
,
and p=2 (dashed line) and
W Hz-1,
,
and p=2 (dot-dashed line). This is a strong
evidence that the optical nuclear emission of quasars,
BL Lacs, and radio galaxies from the MOJAVE sample is
generated by relativistic particles in the jet and is Doppler boosted.
The quasars data are best fitted with p=3,
indicating that the source of optical emission is likely to be a
discrete and optically thin.
We find that the radio-loudness increases with increasing
redshift for quasars and radio galaxies (Fig. 10). The
significance of correlation is
for 95 quasars (Table 1)
and is mainly due to the lack of low radio-loud quasars at high
redshifts. In the MOJAVE-1 sample, the probability to find the
intrinsically luminous jets and jets with larger Lorentz factors is
high at high redshifts, while at redshifts less than
0.6 there is
a deficit of sources with high Doppler factors and small viewing
angles, because they are rare in the population and the volume element
is small at low-z (Lister
et al. 2009b). The correlation in the R-z
relation plane is evident at
and can be interpreted as a tendency for strong AGN to have a high
radio-loudness. In high-redshift superluminal quasars, the beamed
optical emission from the jet dominates over the optical emission from
the accretion disk. In this case, we can interpret the R-z
correlation as the radio-strong quasars to have lower Doppler factors
in the optical regime compared to the ones in radio. Note that in about
ten low-redshift quasars (
)
with mostly low Doppler factors, the optical emission from the disk can
be comparable/dominant to that of the jet.
Correlations presented in Table 2 between photometric optical luminosity and radio luminosity of the compact jet, kinetic jet power, and radio-loudness hold also for optical spectral luminosities measured for 61 AGN.
7 Summary
We used the statistically complete sample of 135 compact radio sources provided by the MOJAVE program to investigate correlations between the properties of the pc-scale jets at 15 GHz, the extended radio emission at 151 MHz, and the optical nuclear emission at 5100 Å. The main results are summarized as follows:- 1.
- We determine the optical nuclei fluxes at 5100 Å
for 135 MOJAVE-1 AGN with their photometric optical fluxes
available in the MAPS and USNO-B catalogs. There is a significant
positive correlation for 99 quasars and 18 BL Lacs between
optical nuclear luminosities and jet luminosities at 15 GHz
originated in the jet at milliarcseconds scales. For quasars,
correlations hold also between optical nuclear luminosity and
luminosities of the unresolved core (at sub-milliarcseconds scales) and
total radio (VLBA) of the jet, suggesting that the optical emission is
non-thermal and originates in the innermost part of the jet at
sub-parsec scales, while in the BL Lacs it is generated in the
parsec-scale jet.
The generation of the relativistically beamed optical emission in the MOJAVE blazars is evident from the apparent speed - optical nuclear luminosity relation plane. In this diagram, the data of quasars, BL Lacs and radio galaxies are fitted by an aspect curve derived from the relativistic beaming theory, suggesting that optical emission from these sources is relativistically Doppler-boosted. We estimate the peak values of the intrinsic optical luminosity and the Lorentz factor of the jet for each population of blazars:W Hz-1,
, and p=3 for quasars,
W Hz-1,
, and p=2 for BL Lacs, and
W Hz-1,
, and p=2 for radio galaxies. About 95% of quasars have the peak values of
W Hz-1,
, and p=3. The boosting factor p=3 favors the source of optical continuum emission for quasars to be discrete and optically thin.
- 2.
- The kinetic power of 135 compact jets, determined from the
flux density measured at 151 MHz, is on average higher in
quasars than in BL Lacs, and it is lower in radio galaxies. We
find a strong positive correlation between the intrinsic kinetic power
of the jet and the apparent luminosities of the total and unresolved
core emission of the jet at 15 GHz. This correlation can be a
result of the correlation between kinetic power and intrinsic
luminosity of the pc-scale jet, which reflects that intrinsically
luminous compact jets deliver more relativistic electrons to
kiloparsec-scales. In this way they accumulate more low-energy
electrons in the radio lobes, which results in powerful extended radio
lobes radiating at low radio frequencies.
Another possibility to interpret the correlation found in therelation plane is that the low-frequency emission at 151 MHz is relativistically beamed and its variability is correlated with beamed radio emission at 15 GHz. Correlated variability at low and high frequencies was found in few superluminal sources. It is most likely that both effects, the beaming at low frequencies and the intrinsic luminosity of the jet at 15 GHz in beamed AGN, contribute to the relation between kinetic power and apparent luminosity of the jet. Monitoring of the MOJAVE AGN in a wide range of frequencies and over a period of few years is needed to distinguish and estimate the contribution of each effect.
The kinetic power of quasars positively correlates with the radio-loudness, i.e., the ratio of the radio flux density at 15 GHz to the optical flux at 5100 Å, and negatively with the compactness of the core (the ratio between the unresolved core and the total VLBA emission).
- 3.
- No correlation is found between the intrinsic radio luminosity at 15 GHz and the Lorentz factor of the jet for 48 quasars. A larger number of the MOJAVE-1 AGN with measured Doppler factors are needed to confirm this result.
- 4.
- We find that the radio-loudness of quasars increases with increasing the redshifts. This positive correlation is due to the lack of compact AGN with small radio-loudness at high redshifts. This effect is interpreted as a tendency for strong AGN detected at high redshifts to have a high radio-loudness. This can happen if the Doppler factor of the jet in the radio regime is higher than that in the optical.
We thank Julia Riley for useful discussions and acknowledge the contributions of Yuri Y. Kovalev, Talvikki Hovatta, Alexander B. Pushkarev, and the rest of the MOJAVE team. Special thanks are given to the technical staff and night assistant of the OAN-SPM and OAGH. TGA acknowledges support by DFG-SPP project under grant 566960. J.T. acknowledges financial support from CONACYT No. 176551 scholarship. This work is supported by CONACYT basic research grants No. 39560-F, 48484 and 54480 (México). This research has made use of (1) the NASA/IPAC Extragalactic Database (NED) which is operated by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, under contract with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration; (2) the USNO-B catalog (Monet et al. 2003); (3) the MAPS Catalog of POSS I supported by the University of Minnesota (the APS databases can be accessed at http://aps.umn.edu/); (4) the database CATS (Verkhodanov et al. 1997) of the Special Astrophysical Observatory; and (5) the MOJAVE database that is maintained by the MOJAVE team (Lister et al. 2009a). The MOJAVE project is supported under National Science Foundation grant 0807860-AST and NASA-Fermi grant NNX08AV67G. The APS databases can be accessed at http://aps.umn.edu/. The National Radio Astronomy Observatory is a facility of the National Science Foundation operated under cooperative agreement by Associated Universities, Inc.
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Footnotes
- ... emission
- Table 3 is only available in electronic form at the CDS via anonymous ftp to cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr (130.79.128.5) or via http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr/viz-bin/qcat?J/A+A/520/A62
- ... website
- http://www.physics.purdue.edu/MOJAVE/
- ... OAN-SPM
- Observatorio Astronómico Nacional at San Pedro Mártir, Baja California, México.
- ... GHAO
- Observatorio Astrofísico Guillermo Haro at Cananea, Sonora, México.
All Tables
Table 1:
Kendall's
correlation analysis between parameters of the jet, extended radio
structure for all AGN from the MOJAVE-1 sample, quasars and
BL Lacs.
Table 2:
Kendall's
correlation analysis between radio parameters of the jet and optical
nuclear luminosity at 5100 Å.
All Figures
![]() |
Figure 1:
Left panel: linear transformation between O
MAPS and |
Open with DEXTER | |
In the text |
![]() |
Figure 2:
Left panel: photometric fluxes against
spectroscopic fluxes scaled to 5100 Å for 123 AGN from the
full sample. Right panel: corrected photometric
fluxes against spectroscopic fluxes at 5100 Å for
the same sample. The dotted line represents the identity. Averaged 1 |
Open with DEXTER | |
In the text |
![]() |
Figure 3: Distribution of corrected photometric optical luminosities at 5100 Å for the sample of 125 AGN for MOJAVE-1 sample ( top panel), 99 quasars, 18 BL Lacs and 8 radio galaxies. |
Open with DEXTER | |
In the text |
![]() |
Figure 4: Viewing angle of the jet against radio luminosity of the VLBA jet at 15 GHz for 48 quasars, 12 BL Lacs, and 5 radio galaxies. |
Open with DEXTER | |
In the text |
![]() |
Figure 5: Distribution of the jet kinetic power for 128 AGN ( top panel): 101 quasars, 19 BL Lacs, and 8 radio galaxies. |
Open with DEXTER | |
In the text |
![]() |
Figure 6:
Jet kinetic power versus apparent luminosity (top panel)
and intrinsic luminosity (middle panel) of the jet
at 15 GHz, and viewing angle of the jet (bottom panel).
Note that the upper limit of errors associated with the jet viewing
angle is |
Open with DEXTER | |
In the text |
![]() |
Figure 7: Jet kinetic power versus apparent speed and radio loudness of the VLBA jet. |
Open with DEXTER | |
In the text |
![]() |
Figure 8: Total VLBA luminosity at 15 GHz versus optical nuclear luminosity at 5100 Å for 125 compact AGN. |
Open with DEXTER | |
In the text |
![]() |
Figure 9: Apparent speed of the jet versus optical nuclear luminosity at 5100 Å for 164 AGN from the MOJAVE sample. The sample of AGN consists of 127 quasars (circles), 21 BL Lacs (open squares), and 16 radio galaxies (filled triangles). The aspect curve is given for quasars (dotted and full lines which cover all and 95% of quasars, respectively), BL Lacs (dashed line), and radio galaxies (dot-dashed line). |
Open with DEXTER | |
In the text |
![]() |
Figure 10: Radio-loudness versus redshift for 125 compact AGN. |
Open with DEXTER | |
In the text |
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