Abstract

Abstract We present the results from the 43 GHz Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) observations of 124 compact radio-loud active galactic nuclei (AGNs) that were conducted between 2014 November and 2016 May. The typical dimensions of the restoring beam in each image are about 0.5 mas × 0.2 mas. The highest resolution of 0.2 mas corresponds to a physical size of 0.02 pc for the lowest redshift source in the sample. The 43 GHz very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) images of 97 AGNs are presented for the first time. We study the source compactness on milliarcsecond and submilliarcsecond scales, and suggest that 95 sources in our sample are suitable for future space VLBI observations. By analyzing our data supplemented with other VLBA AGN surveys from the literature, we find that the core brightness temperature increases with increasing frequency below a break frequency ∼7 GHz, and decreases between ∼7 and 240 GHz but increases again above 240 GHz in the rest frame of the sources. This indicates that the synchrotron opacity changes from optically thick to thin. We also find a strong statistical correlation between radio and γ-ray flux densities. Our correlation is tighter than those in the literature derived from lower-frequency VLBI data, suggesting that the γ-ray emission is produced more cospatially with the 43 GHz VLBA core emission. This correlation can also be extrapolated to the unbeamed AGN population, implying that a universal γ-ray production mechanism might be at work for all types of AGNs.

Highlights

  • Active galactic nuclei (AGNs) host the most powerful natural particle accelerators, producing high-energy cosmic rays and neutrino emission

  • Based on radio spectrum data,11 we suggest that this source is a gigahertz-peaked spectrum (GPS) or high-frequency peaker (HFP) candidate

  • We present the 43 GHz contour images of all the 124 sources and give comments on selected individual sources to highlight their properties in the context of other information from literature

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Summary

Introduction

Active galactic nuclei (AGNs) host the most powerful natural particle accelerators, producing high-energy cosmic rays and neutrino emission. The source of high-energy cosmic neutrinos (∼300 TeV) detected by IceCube on 2017 September 22 was identified as a distant γ-ray blazar, TXS 0506+056, which is an intermediate synchrotron-peaked BL Lac object at a redshift of z = 0.34 (IceCube Collaboration et al 2018a, 2018b; Halzen et al 2019).

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