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OH megamasers, starburst and AGN activity in Markarian 231

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 Added by Anita Richards
 Publication date 2005
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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We present MERLIN observations of OH maser and radio continuum emission from the Ultra Luminous IR Galaxy Markarian 231. The 1665- and 1667-MHz transitions have a combined velocity extent of 720 km/s and show a similar position-velocity structure including a gradient of 1.7 km/s/pc from NW to SE along the 420-pc major axis, steeper in the inner few tens of pc. The maser distribution is modelled as a torus rotating about an axis inclined at ~45deg. We estimate the enclosed mass density to be 320(90) Msun in a flattened distribution, including a central unresolved mass of </=8E+06 Msun. All the maser emission is projected against a region with a radio continuum brightness temperature >/=1E+05 K, giving a maser gain of </=2.2. The 1667:1665-MHz line ratio is close to the LTE ratio of 1.8 consistent with radiatively pumped, unsaturated masers. The size of individual masing regions is in the range 0.25-4 pc with a covering factor close to unity. There are no very bright compact masers, in contrast to galaxies such as the Seyfert 2 Markarian 273 where the masing torus is viewed nearer edge-on. The comparatively modest maser amplification seen from Markarian 231 is consistent with its classification as a Seyfert 1. Most of the radio continuum emission on 50-500 pc scales is probably of starburst origin but the compact peak is 0.4 per cent polarized by a magnetic field running north-south, similar to the jet direction on these scales. There is no close correlation between maser and continuum intensity. Comparisons with other data show that the jet changes direction close the nucleus and suggest that the sub-kpc disc hosting the masers and starburst activity is severely warped.



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210 - James McBride 2013
We present estimates of magnetic field strengths in the interstellar media of starburst galaxies derived from measurements of Zeeman splitting associated with OH megamasers. The results for eight galaxies with Zeeman detections suggest that the magnetic energy density in the interstellar medium of starburst galaxies is comparable to their hydrostatic gas pressure, as in the Milky Way. We discuss the significant uncertainties in this conclusion, and possible measurements that could reduce these uncertainties. We also compare the Zeeman splitting derived magnetic field estimates to magnetic field strengths estimated using synchrotron fluxes and assuming that the magnetic field and cosmic rays have comparable energy densities, known as the minimum energy argument. We find that the minimum energy argument systematically underestimates magnetic fields in starburst galaxies, and that the conditions that would be required to produce agreement between the minimum energy estimate and the Zeeman derived estimate of interstellar medium magnetic fields are implausible. The conclusion that magnetic fields in starburst galaxies exceed the minimum energy magnetic fields is consistent with starburst galaxies adhering to the linearity of the FIR-radio correlation.
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