Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics
Scientific paper
2000-03-21
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Astrophysics
29 pages, includes 25 figures and 6 tables. Uses emulateapj5.sty. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. A ver
Scientific paper
10.1086/309413
A significant fraction of compact radio-loud quasars display most of the characteristics of relativistically beamed, high-optical polarization blazars, yet are weakly polarized in the optical regime. We have used the VLBA at 22 and 43 GHz to look for differences in the parsec-scale magnetic field structures of 18 high- and low-optically polarized, compact radio-loud quasars (HPQs and LPRQs, respectively). We find a strong correlation between the polarization level of the unresolved parsec-scale radio core at 43 GHz and overall optical polarization of the source, which suggests a common (possibly co-spatial) origin for the emission at these two wavelengths. The magnetic fields of the polarized 43 GHz radio cores are aligned roughly transverse to the jet axis. Similar orientations are seen in the optical, suggesting that the polarized flux at both wavelengths is due to one or more strong transverse shocks located very close to the base of the jet. In LPRQs, these shocks appear to be weak near the core, and gradually increase in strength down the jet. The LPRQs in our sample tend to have less luminous radio cores than the HPQs, and jet components with magnetic fields predominantly parallel to the flow. The components in HPQ jets, on the other hand, tend to have transverse alignments. These differences cannot be accounted for by a simple model in which HPQs and LPRQs are the same type of object, seen at different angles to the line of sight. A more likely scenario is that LPRQs represent a quiescent phase of blazar activity, in which the inner jet flow does not undergo strong shocks.
Lister Matthew L.
Smith Paul S.
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