IUCAA Preprints

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    Multifrequency study of giant radio sources II. Spectral ageing analysis of the lobes of selected sources
    (2007-12-02) Jamrozy, M.; Konar, C.; Machalski, J.; et al.
    Multifrequency observations with the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope (GMRT) and the Very Large Array (VLA) are used to determine the spectral breaks in consecutive strips along the lobes of a sample of selected giant radio sources (GRSs) in order to estimate their spectral ages. The maximum spectral ages estimated for the detected radio emission in the lobes of our sources range from ∼6 to 36 Myr with a median value of ∼20 Myr using the classical equipartition fields. Using the magnetic field estimates from the Beck & Krause formalism the spectral ages range from ∼5 to 38 Myr with a median value of ∼22 Myr. These ages are significantly older than smaller sources. In all but one source (J1313+6937) the spectral age gradually increases with distance from the hotspot regions, confirming that acceleration of the particles mainly occurs in the hotspots. Most of the GRSs do not exhibit zero spectral ages in the hotspots, as is the case in earlier studies of smaller sources. This is likely to be largely due to contamination by more extended emission due to relatively modest resolutions. The injection spectral indices range from ∼0.55 to 0.88 with a median value of ∼0.6. We discuss these values in the light of theoretical expectations, and show that the injection spectral index appears to be correlated with luminosity and/or redshift as well as with linear size.
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    Influence of the jet opening angle on the derived kinematical parameters of blazar jets having uniform and stratified bulk motion
    (2007-07-26) Krishna, Gopal; Dhurde, Samir; Sircar, Pronoy; et al.
    We present analytical modelling of conical relativistic jets, in order to evaluate the role of the jet opening angle on certain key parameters that are inferred from VLBI radio observations of blazar nuclear jets. The key parameters evaluated are the orientation angle (i.e., the viewing angle) of the jet and the apparent speed and Doppler factor of the radio knots on parsec scales. Quantitative comparisons are made of the influence of the jet opening angle on the above parameters of the radio knots, as would be estimated for two widely discussed variants of relativistic nuclear jets, namely, those having uniform bulk speed and those in which the bulk Lorentz factor of the flow decreases with distance from the jet axis (a ‘spine–sheath’ flow). Our analysis shows that for both types of jet velocity distributions the expectation value of the jet orientation angle at first falls dramatically with increases in the (central) jet Lorentz factor, but it levels off at a fraction of the opening angle for extremely relativistic jets. We also find that the effective values of the apparent speeds and Doppler factors of the knots always decline substantially with increasing jet opening angle, but that this effect is strongest for ultra-relativistic jets with uniform bulk speed. We suggest that the paucity of highly superluminal parsec-scale radio components in TeV blazars can be understood if their jets are highly relativistic and, being intrinsically weaker, somewhat less well collimated, in comparison to the jets in other blazars.
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    Constraining fundamental constants of physics with quasar absorption line systems
    (2009-08-01) Petitjean, Patrick; Vivek, M.; Mohan, V.; et al.
    We report long-slit spectroscopic observations of SDSS J092712+294344 carried-out at the recently commissioned 2m telescope in IUCAA Girawali Observatory, India. This AGN-like source is known to feature three sets of emission lines at zem = 0.6972, 0.7020 and 0.7128. Different scenarios such as a recoiling black hole after asymmetric emission of gravitational waves, binary black holes and possible merging systems are proposed for this object. We test these scenarios by comparing our spectra with that fromthe Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), obtained 4 years prior to our observations. Comparing the redshifts of [Oiii]λλ4960,5008 we put a 3σ limit on the relative acceleration to be less than 32 km s−1 yr −1 between different emitting regions. Using the 2D spectra obtained at different position angles we show that the [Oiii]λ5008 line from the zem = 0.7128 component is extended beyond the spectral point spread function.We infer the linear extent of this line emitting region is ∼ 8 kpc.We also find a tentative evidence for an offset between the centroid of the [Oiii]λ5008 line at zem = 0.7128 and the QSO trace when the slit is aligned at a position angle of 299◦ . This corresponds to the zem = 0.7128 system being at an impact parameter of ∼1 kpc with respect to the zem = 0.6972 in the north west direction. Based on our observations we conclude that the binary black hole model is most unlikely. The spatial extent and the sizes are consistent with both black hole recoil and merging scenarios