No Arabic abstract
We report on the first results of the POLAMI program, a simultaneous 3.5 and 1.3mm full-Stokes-polarisation monitoring of a sample of 36 of the brightest active galactic nuclei in the northern sky with the IRAM 30m Telescope. Through a systematic statistical study of data taken from October 2006 (from December 2009 for the case of the 1.3mm observations) to August 2014, we characterise the variability of the total flux density and linear polarisation. We find that all sources in the sample are highly variable in total flux density at both 3.5 and 1.3mm, as well as in spectral index, that is found to be optically thin in general. The total flux-density variability at 1.3mm is found, in general, to be faster, and to have larger amplitude and flatter PSD slopes than 3.5mm. The polarisation degree is on average larger at 1.3mm than at 3.5mm, by a factor of 2.6. The variability of linear polarisation degree is faster and has higher fractional amplitude than for total flux density, with the typical time scales during prominent polarisation peaks being significantly faster at 1.3mm than at 3.5mm. The polarisation angle at both 3.5 and 1.3mm is highly variable. Most of the sources show one or two excursions of >180 deg. on time scales from a few weeks to about a year during the course of our observations. The 3.5 and 1.3mm polarisation angle evolution follow rather well each other, although the 1.3mm data show a clear preference to more prominent variability on the short time scales, i.e. weeks. The data are compatible with multi-zone models of conical jets involving smaller emission regions for the shortest-wavelength emitting sites. Such smaller emitting regions should also be more efficient in energising particle populations. The data also favours the integrated emission at 1.3mm to have better ordered magnetic fields than the one at 3.5mm.
We analyse the circular polarisation data accumulated in the first 7 years of the POLAMI project introduced in an accompanying paper (Agudo et al.). In the 3mm wavelength band, we acquired more than 2600 observations, and all but one of our 37 sample sources were detected, most of them several times. For most sources, the observed distribution of the degree of circular polarisation is broader than that of unpolarised calibrators, indicating that weak (<0.5%) circular polarisation is present most of the time. Our detection rate and the maximum degree of polarisation found, 2.0%, are comparable to previous surveys, all made at much longer wavelengths. We argue that the process generating circular polarisation must not be strongly wavelength dependent, and we propose that the widespread presence of circular polarisation in our short wavelength sample dominated by blazars is mostly due to Faraday conversion of the linearly polarised synchrotron radiation in the helical magnetic field of the jet. Circular polarisation is variable, most notably on time scales comparable to or shorter than our median sampling interval <1 month. Longer time scales of about one year are occasionally detected, but severely limited by the weakness of the signal. At variance with some longer wavelength investigations we find that the sign of circular polarisation changes in most sources, while only 7 sources, including 3 already known, have a strong preference for one sign. The degrees of circular and linear polarisation do not show any systematic correlation. We do find however one particular event where the two polarisation degrees vary in synchronism during a time span of 0.9 years. The paper also describes a novel method for calibrating the sign of circular polarisation observations.
We describe the POLAMI program for the monitoring of all four Stokes parameters of a sample of bright radio-loud active galactic nuclei with the IRAM 30m telescope at 3.5 and 1.3mm. The program started in October 2006 and accumulated, until August 2014, 2300 observations at 3.5mm, achieving a median time sampling interval of 22 days for the sample of 37 sources. This first paper explains the source selection, mostly blazars, the observing strategy and data calibration, and gives the details of the instrumental polarisation corrections. The sensitivity (1sigma) reached at 3.5mm is 0.5% (linear polarisation degree), 4.7 deg. (polarisation angle), and 0.23% (circular polarisation), while the corresponding values at 1.3mm are 1.7%, 9.9 deg., and 0.72%, respectively. The data quality is demonstrated by the time sequences of our calibrators Mars and Uranus. For the quasar 3C286, widely used as a linear polarisation calibrator, we give improved estimates of its linear polarisation, and show for the first time occasional detections of its weak circular polarisation, which suggests a small level of variability of the source at millimeter wavelengths.
We present results on a systematic study of flux variability on hourly time-scales in a large sample of active galactic nuclei (AGN) in the 3-79 keV band using data from Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array. Our sample consists of 4 BL Lac objects (BL Lacs), 3 flat spectrum radio quasars (FSRQs) 24 Seyfert 1, 42 Seyfert 2 and 8 narrow line Seyfert 1 (NLSy1) galaxies. We find that in the 3-79 keV band, about 65% of the sources in our sample show significant variations on hourly time scales. Using Mann-Whitney U-test and Kolmogorov-Smirnov test, we find no difference in the variability behaviour between Seyfert 1 and 2 galaxies. The blazar sources (FSRQs and BL Lacs) in our sample, are more variable than Seyfert galaxies that include Seyfert 1 and Seyfert 2 in the soft (3-10 keV), hard (10-79 keV) and total (3-79 keV) bands. NLSy1 galaxies show the highest duty cycle of variability (87%), followed by BL Lacs (82%), Seyfert galaxies (56%) and FSRQs (23%). We obtained flux doubling/halving time in the hard X-ray band less than 10 min in 11 sources. The flux variations between the hard and soft bands in all the sources in our sample are consistent with zero lag.
The apparent position of jet base (core) in radio-loud active galactic nuclei changes with frequency because of synchrotron self-absorption. Studying this `core shift` effect enables us to reconstruct properties of the jet regions close to the central engine. We report here results from core shift measurements in AGNs observed with global VLBI at 2 and 8 GHz at epochs from 1994 to 2016. Our sample contains 40 objects observed at least 10 times during that period. The core shift is determined using a new automatic procedure introduced to minimize possible biases. The resulting multiple epoch measurements of the core position are employed for examining temporal variability of the core shift. We argue that the core shift variability is a common phenomenon, as established for 33 of 40 AGNs we study. Our analysis shows that the typical offsets between the core positions at 2 and 8 GHz are about 0.5 mas and they vary in time. Typical variability of the individual core positions is about 0.3 mas. The measurements show a strong dependence between the core position and its flux density, suggesting that changes in both are likely related to the nuclear flares injecting denser plasma into the flow. We determine that density of emitting relativistic particles significantly increases during these flares, while relative magnetic field changes less and in the opposite direction.
Active Galactic Nuclei are the dominant sources of gamma rays outside our Galaxy and also candidates for being the source of ultra-high energy cosmic rays. In addition to being emitters of broad-band non-thermal radiation throughout the electromagnetic spectrum, their emission is highly variable on timescales from years to minutes. Hence, high-cadence monitoring observations are needed to understand their emission mechanisms. The Africa Millimetre Telescope is planned to be the first mm-wave radio telescope on the African continent and one of few in the Southern hemisphere. Further to contributing to the global mm-VLBI observations with the Event Horizon Telescope, substantial amounts of observation time will be available for monitoring observations of Active Galactic Nuclei. Here we review the scientific scope of the Africa Millimetre Telescope for monitoring of Active Galactic Nuclei at mm-wavelengths.