6533b82bfe1ef96bd128d57c

RESEARCH PRODUCT

VSOP monitoring of the Quasar 1928+738

J. C. GuiradoYasuhiro MurataHisashi HirabayashiJohn ConwayA. G. PolatidisRobert A. PrestonDavid W. MurphyD. L. JonesSteven TingayH. KobayashiDavid L. Meier

subject

PhysicsSuperluminal motionSpacecraftbusiness.industryEclipticAstronomyAstronomy and AstrophysicsQuasarAstrophysicsVSOPRedshiftBinary black holeSpace and Planetary ScienceVery-long-baseline interferometrybusiness

description

One limitation of the VSOP (VLBI Space Observatory Program) mission is that several famous superluminal sources such as 3C273 cannot be monitored with good uv-coverage throughout the lifetime of the VSOP Mission at regular intervals that are spaced closely enough to follow the evolution in the fine-scale source-structure. The reason for this is that the HALCA spacecraft cannot#observe sources outside certain restricted ranges of sun angle, defined to be the time variable angle between the source and the sun. However sources that lie within 10 degrees of the ecliptic poles can be observed throughout the year and observations are not restricted to narrow temporal windows. Furthermore, the best ground-based uv-coverages are obtained for circumpolar sources and consequently these will be the sources for which the maximum amount of space VLBI data will be obtained with a given ground array. We have began a VSOP monitoring campaign at 5 GHz on the relatively low redshift (z=0.3) superluminal quasar 1928+738 which is both a circumpolar source and lies 10 degrees away from the ecliptic pole. 1928+738 is in the S5 polar cap sample and has been well studied both on the arsecond-scale and mas-scale. 22 GHz observations have shown that the motion of the VLBI components in 1928+738 is inconsistent with simple linear expansion along a fixed position angle (PA) for all components. Indeed, 1928+738 was one of the first sources for which helical jet motion was proposed and it has been further proposed that a massive binary black hole (MBBH) system is responsible for the sinusoidal jet ridge line observed at 22 GHz over a S year period. our VSOP observations are designed to check this proposal.

https://doi.org/10.1016/s1387-6473(99)00087-1