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TANAMI: Tracking Active Galactic Nuclei with Austral Milliarcsecond Interferometry - II. Additional Sources

Authors :
Müller, C.
Kadler, M.
Ojha, R.
Schulz, R.
Trüstedt, J.
Edwards, P. G.
Ros, E.
Carpenter, B.
Angioni, R.
Blanchard, J.
Böck, M.
Burd, P. R.
Dörr, M.
Dutka, M. S.
Eberl, T.
Gulyaev, S.
Hase, H.
Horiuchi, S.
Katz, U.
Krauß, F.
Lovell, J. E. J.
Natusch, T.
Nesci, R.
Phillips, C.
Plötz, C.
Pursimo, T.
Quick, J. F. H.
Stevens, J.
Thompson, D. J.
Tingay, S. J.
Tzioumis, A. K.
Weston, S.
Wilms, J.
Zensus, J. A.
Source :
A&A 610, A1 (2018)
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

TANAMI is a multiwavelength program monitoring active galactic nuclei (AGN) south of -30deg declination including high-resolution Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) imaging, radio, optical/UV, X-ray and gamma-ray studies. We have previously published first-epoch 8.4GHz VLBI images of the parsec-scale structure of the initial sample. In this paper, we present images of 39 additional sources. The full sample comprises most of the radio- and gamma-ray brightest AGN in the southern quarter of the sky, overlapping with the region from which high-energy (>100TeV) neutrino events have been found. We characterize the parsec-scale radio properties of the jets and compare with the quasi-simultaneous Fermi/LAT gamma-ray data. Furthermore, we study the jet properties of sources which are in positional coincidence with high-energy neutrino events as compared to the full sample. We test the positional agreement of high-energy neutrino events with various AGN samples. Our observations yield the first images of many jets below -30deg declination at milliarcsecond resolution. We find that gamma-ray loud TANAMI sources tend to be more compact on parsec-scales and have higher core brightness temperatures than gamma-ray faint jets, indicating higher Doppler factors. No significant structural difference is found between sources in positional coincidence with high-energy neutrino events and other TANAMI jets. The 22 gamma-ray brightest AGN in the TANAMI sky show only a weak positional agreement with high-energy neutrinos demonstrating that the >100TeV IceCube signal is not simply dominated by a small number of the $\gamma$-ray brightest blazars. Instead, a larger number of sources have to contribute to the signal with each individual source having only a small Poisson probability for producing an event in multi-year integrations of current neutrino detectors.<br />Comment: A&A accepted (edited version), 21 pages, 13 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
A&A 610, A1 (2018)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1709.03091
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201731455