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Multiepoch Very Long Baseline Array observations of egret-detected quasars and BL lacertae objects: Superluminal motion of gamma-ray bright blazars

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL SUPPLEMENT SERIES
Volume 134, Issue 2, Pages 181-240

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/320858

Keywords

BL Lacertae objects : general; galaxies : jets; gamma rays : observations; quasars : general; radio continuum : galaxies

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We present the results of a program to monitor the structure of the radio emission in 42 gamma -ray bright blazars (31 quasars and 11 BL Lac objects) with the Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) at 43, 22, and occasionally 15 and 8.4 GHz, over the period from 1993 November to 1997 July. We determine proper motions in 33 sources and find that the apparent superluminal motions in gamma -ray sources are much faster than for the general population of bright compact radio sources. This follows the strong dependence of the gamma -ray flux on the level of relativistic beaming for both external radiation Compton and synchrotron self-Compton emission. There is a positive correlation (correlation coefficient r = 0.45) between the flux density of the VLBI core and the gamma -ray flux and a moderate correlation (partial correlation coefficient r = 0.31) between gamma -ray apparent luminosity and superluminal velocities of jet components, as expected if the gamma -ray emission originates in a very compact region of the relativistic jet and is highly beamed. In 43% of the sources the jet bends by more than 20 degrees on parsec scales, which is consistent with amplification by projection effects of modest actual changes in position angle. In 27 of the sources in the sample there is at least one non-core component that appears to be stationary during our observations. Different characteristics of stationary features close to and farther from the core lead us to suggest two different classes of stationary components: those within about 2 mas of the core, probably associated with standing hydrodynamical compressions, and those farther down the jet, which tend to be associated with bends in the jet.

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