Ground-state 12CO emission and a resolved jet at 115 GHz (rest-frame) in the radio loud quasar 3C318

ArXiv 1308.336 (2013)

Authors:

Ian Heywood, Alejo Martinez-Sansigre, Chris J Willott, Steve Rawlings

Abstract:

An analysis of 44 GHz VLA observations of the z = 1.574 radio-loud quasar 3C318 has revealed emission from the redshifted J = 1 - 0 transition of the CO molecule and spatially resolved the 6.3 kpc radio jet associated with the quasar at 115 GHz rest-frame. The continuum-subtracted line emitter is spatially offset from the quasar nucleus by 0.33" (2.82 kpc in projection). This spatial offset has a significance of >8-sigma and, together with a previously published -400 km/s velocity offset measured in the J = 2 - 1 CO line relative to the systemic redshift of the quasar, rules out a circumnuclear starburst or molecular gas ring and suggests that the quasar host galaxy is either undergoing a major merger with a gas-rich galaxy or is otherwise a highly disrupted system. If the merger scenario is correct then the event may be in its early stages, acting as the trigger for both the young radio jets in the quasar and a starburst in the merging galaxy. The total molecular gas mass in the spatially offset line emitter as measured from the ground-state CO line M_H2 = 3.7 (+/-0.4) x 10^10 (alpha_CO/0.8) M_solar. Assuming that the line-emitter can be modelled as a rotating disk, an inclination-dependent upper limit is derived for its dynamical mass M_dyn sin^2(i) < 3.2 x 10^9 M_solar, suggesting that for M_H2 to remain less than M_dyn the inclination angle must be i < 16 degrees. The far infrared and CO luminosities of 246 extragalactic systems are collated from the literature for comparison. The high molecular gas content of 3C318 is consistent with that of the general population of high redshift quasars and sub-millimetre galaxies.

Studying Galactic interstellar turbulence through fluctuations in synchrotron emission: First LOFAR Galactic foreground detection

ArXiv 1308.2804 (2013)

Authors:

M Iacobelli, M Haverkorn, E Orrú, RF Pizzo, J Anderson, R Beck, MR Bell, A Bonafede, K Chyzy, R-J Dettmar, TA Enßlin, G Heald, C Horellou, A Horneffer, W Jurusik, H Junklewitz, M Kuniyoshi, DD Mulcahy, R Paladino, W Reich, A Scaife, C Sobey, C Sotomayor-Beltran, A Alexov, A Asgekar, IM Avruch, ME Bell, I van Bemmel, MJ Bentum, G Bernardi, P Best, L Birzan, F Breitling, J Broderick, WN Brouw, M Bruggen, HR Butcher, B Ciardi, JE Conway, F de Gasperin, E de Geus, S Duscha, J Eisloffel, D Engels, H Falcke, RA Fallows, C Ferrari, W Frieswijk, MA Garrett, J Griessmeier, AW Gunst, JP Hamaker, TE Hassall, JWT Hessels, M Hoeft, J Horandel, V Jelic, A Karastergiou, VI Kondratiev, LVE Koopmans, M Kramer, G Kuper, J van Leeuwen, G Macario, G Mann, JP McKean, H Munk, M Pandey-Pommier, AG Polatidis, H Röttgering, D Schwarz, J Sluman, O Smirnov, BW Stappers, M Steinmetz, M Tagger, Y Tang, C Tasse, C Toribio, R Vermeulen, C Vocks, C Vogt, RJ van Weeren, MW Wise, O Wucknitz, S Yatawatta, P Zarka, A Zensus

Abstract:

The characteristic outer scale of turbulence and the ratio of the random to ordered components of the magnetic field are key parameters to characterise magnetic turbulence in the interstellar gas, which affects the propagation of cosmic rays within the Galaxy. We provide new constraints to those two parameters. We use the LOw Frequency ARray (LOFAR) to image the diffuse continuum emission in the Fan region at (l,b) (137.0,+7.0) at 80"x70" resolution in the range [146,174] MHz. We detect multi-scale fluctuations in the Galactic synchrotron emission and compute their power spectrum. Applying theoretical estimates and derivations from the literature for the first time, we derive the outer scale of turbulence and the ratio of random to ordered magnetic field from the characteristics of these fluctuations . We obtain the deepest image of the Fan region to date and find diffuse continuum emission within the primary beam. The power spectrum of the foreground synchrotron fluctuations displays a power law behaviour for scales between 100 and 8 arcmin with a slope of (-1.84+/-0.19). We find an upper limit of about 20 pc for the outer scale of the magnetic interstellar turbulence toward the Fan region. We also find a variation of the ratio of random to ordered field as a function of Galactic coordinates, supporting different turbulent regimes. We use power spectra fluctuations from LOFAR as well as earlier GMRT and WSRT observations to constrain the outer scale of turbulence of the Galactic synchrotron foreground, finding a range of plausible values of 10-20 pc. Then, we use this information to deduce lower limits of the ratio of ordered to random magnetic field strength. These are found to be 0.3, 0.3, and 0.5 for the LOFAR, WSRT and GMRT fields considered respectively. Both these constraints are in agreement with previous estimates.

Herschel-atlas: A binary HyLIRG pinpointing a cluster of starbursting protoellipticals

Astrophysical Journal 772:2 (2013)

Authors:

RJ Ivison, AM Swinbank, I Smail, AI Harris, RS Bussmann, A Cooray, P Cox, H Fu, A Kovács, M Krips, D Narayanan, M Negrello, R Neri, J Peñarrubia, J Richard, DA Riechers, K Rowlands, JG Staguhn, TA Targett, S Amber, AJ Baker, N Bourne, F Bertoldi, M Bremer, JA Calanog, DL Clements, H Dannerbauer, A Dariush, G De Zotti, L Dunne, SA Eales, D Farrah, S Fleuren, A Franceschini, JE Geach, RD George, JC Helly, R Hopwood, E Ibar, MJ Jarvis, JP Kneib, S Maddox, A Omont, D Scott, S Serjeant, MWL Smith, MA Thompson, E Valiante, I Valtchanov, J Vieira, P Van Der Werf

Abstract:

Panchromatic observations of the best candidate hyperluminous infrared galaxies from the widest Herschel extragalactic imaging survey have led to the discovery of at least four intrinsically luminous z = 2.41 galaxies across an ≈100 kpc region - a cluster of starbursting protoellipticals. Via subarcsecond interferometric imaging we have measured accurate gas and star formation surface densities. The two brightest galaxies span ∼3 kpc FWHM in submillimeter/radio continuum and CO J = 4-3, and double that in CO J = 1-0. The broad CO line is due partly to the multitude of constituent galaxies and partly to large rotational velocities in two counter-rotating gas disks - a scenario predicted to lead to the most intense starbursts, which will therefore come in pairs. The disks have M dyn of several × 1011 M o, and gas fractions of ∼40%. Velocity dispersions are modest so the disks are unstable, potentially on scales commensurate with their radii: these galaxies are undergoing extreme bursts of star formation, not confined to their nuclei, at close to the Eddington limit. Their specific star formation rates place them ≳ 5 × above the main sequence, which supposedly comprises large gas disks like these. Their high star formation efficiencies are difficult to reconcile with a simple volumetric star formation law. N-body and dark matter simulations suggest that this system is the progenitor of a B(inary)-type ≈1014.6- o cluster. © 2013. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

The preferentially magnified active nucleus in IRAS F10214+4724 - III. VLBI observations of the radio core

ArXiv 1307.6566 (2013)

Authors:

RP Deane, S Rawlings, MA Garrett, I Heywood, MJ Jarvis, H-R Klöckner, PJ Marshall, JP McKean

Abstract:

We report 1.7 GHz Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) observations of IRAS F10214+4724, a lensed z=2.3 obscured quasar with prodigious star formation. We detect what we argue to be the obscured active nucleus with an effective angular resolution of < 50 pc at z = 2.3 . The S_{1.7} = 210 micro-Jy (9-\sigma) detection of this unresolved source is located within the HST rest-frame ultraviolet/optical arc, however, >~100 mas northward of the arc centre of curvature. This leads to a source plane inversion that places the European VLBI Network detection to within milli-arcseconds of the modelled cusp caustic, resulting in a very large magnification (\mu ~70), over an order of magnitude larger than the CO (1-0) derived magnification of a spatially resolved JVLA map, using the same lens model. We estimate the quasar bolometric luminosity from a number of independent techniques and with our X-ray modelling find evidence that the AGN may be close to Compton-thick, with an intrinsic bolometric luminosity log(L_{bol,QSO} / L_sun) = 11.34 +- 0.27 dex. We make the first black hole mass estimate of IRAS F10214+4724 and find log(M_{BH}/M_sun) = 8.36 +- 0.56 which suggests a low black hole accretion rate (\lambda = \dot{M} / \dot{M}_{Edd} ~ 3\pm^7_2 percent). We find evidence for a M_{BH}/M_{spheroid} ratio that is 1-2 orders of magnitude larger than that of submillimetre galaxies (SMGs) at z~2. At face value, this suggests IRAS F10214+4724 has undergone a different evolutionary path compared to SMGs at the same epoch. A primary result of this work is the demonstration that emission regions of differing size and position can undergo significantly different magnification boosts (> 1 dex) and therefore distort our view of high-redshift, gravitationally lensed galaxies.

The brightness and spatial distributions of terrestrial radio sources

ArXiv 1307.558 (2013)

Authors:

AR Offringa, AG de Bruyn, S Zaroubi, LVE Koopmans, SJ Wijnholds, FB Abdalla, WN Brouw, B Ciardi, IT Iliev, GJA Harker, G Mellema, G Bernardi, P Zarka, A Ghosh, A Alexov, J Anderson, A Asgekar, IM Avruch, R Beck, ME Bell, MR Bell, MJ Bentum, P Best, L Bîrzan, F Breitling, J Broderick, M Brüggen, HR Butcher, F de Gasperin, E de Geus, M de Vos, S Duscha, J Eislöffel, RA Fallows, C Ferrari, W Frieswijk, MA Garrett, J Grießmeier, TE Hassall, A Horneffer, M Iacobelli, E Juette, A Karastergiou, W Klijn, VI Kondratiev, M Kuniyoshi, G Kuper, J van Leeuwen, M Loose, P Maat, G Macario, G Mann, JP McKean, H Meulman, MJ Norden, E Orru, H Paas, M Pandey-Pommier, R Pizzo, AG Polatidis, D Rafferty, W Reich, R van Nieuwpoort, H Röttgering, AMM Scaife, J Sluman, O Smirnov, C Sobey, M Tagger, Y Tang, C Tasse, S ter Veen, C Toribio, R Vermeulen, C Vocks, RJ van Weeren, MW Wise, O Wucknitz

Abstract:

Faint undetected sources of radio-frequency interference (RFI) might become visible in long radio observations when they are consistently present over time. Thereby, they might obstruct the detection of the weak astronomical signals of interest. This issue is especially important for Epoch of Reionisation (EoR) projects that try to detect the faint redshifted HI signals from the time of the earliest structures in the Universe. We explore the RFI situation at 30-163 MHz by studying brightness histograms of visibility data observed with LOFAR, similar to radio-source-count analyses that are used in cosmology. An empirical RFI distribution model is derived that allows the simulation of RFI in radio observations. The brightness histograms show an RFI distribution that follows a power-law distribution with an estimated exponent around -1.5. With several assumptions, this can be explained with a uniform distribution of terrestrial radio sources whose radiation follows existing propagation models. Extrapolation of the power law implies that the current LOFAR EoR observations should be severely RFI limited if the strength of RFI sources remains strong after time integration. This is in contrast with actual observations, which almost reach the thermal noise and are thought not to be limited by RFI. Therefore, we conclude that it is unlikely that there are undetected RFI sources that will become visible in long observations. Consequently, there is no indication that RFI will prevent an EoR detection with LOFAR.