6533b882fe1ef96bd12db935

RESEARCH PRODUCT

TANAMI II. Additional sources

C. MuellerM. KadlerR. OjhaR. SchulzJ. TruestedtP.g. EdwardsE. RosB. CarpenterR. AngioniJ. BlanchardM. BoeckP.r. BurdM. DoerrM.s. DutkaT. EberlS. GulyaevH. HaseS. HoriuchiU. KatzF. Krauss Lovell J.e.j.T. NatuschR. NesciC. PhillipsC. PloetzT. Pursimo Quick J.f.h.J. StevensD.j. ThompsonS.j. TingayA.k. TzioumisS. WestonJ. WilmsJ.a. Zensus

subject

observational astronomyActive galactic nucleigalactic and extragalactic astronomyAstrophysics and Astronomyhigh energy astrophysicsAstrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical PhenomenaPhysicsAstrophysics::Instrumentation and Methods for AstrophysicsAstrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic AstrophysicsNatural SciencesAstrophysics::Galaxy AstrophysicsVery long baseline interferometry

description

TANAMI is a multiwavelength program monitoring active galactic nuclei (AGN) south of -30{deg} declination including high-resolution Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) imaging, radio, optical/UV, X-ray and {gamma}-ray studies. We have previously published first-epoch 8.4GHz VLBI images of the parsec-scale structure of the initial sample. In this paper, we present images of 39 additional sources. The full sample comprises most of the radio- and {gamma}-ray brightest AGN in the southern quarter of the sky, overlapping with the region from which high-energy (>100TeV) neutrino events have been found. We characterize the parsec-scale radio properties of the jets and compare with the quasi-simultaneous Fermi/LAT {gamma}-ray data. Furthermore, we study the jet properties of sources which are in positional coincidence with high-energy neutrino events as compared to the full sample. We test the positional agreement of high-energy neutrino events with various AGN samples. TANAMI VLBI observations at 8.4GHz are made with Southern-Hemisphere radio telescopes located in Australia, Antarctica, Chile, New Zealand, and South Africa. Our observations yield the first images of many jets below -30{deg} declination at milliarcsecond resolution. We find that {gamma}-ray loud TANAMI sources tend to be more compact on parsec-scales and have higher core brightness temperatures than {gamma}-ray faint jets, indicating higher Doppler factors. No significant structural difference is found between sources in positional coincidence with high-energy neutrino events and other TANAMI jets. The 22 {gamma}-ray brightest AGN in the TANAMI sky show only a weak positional agreement with high-energy neutrinos demonstrating that the >100TeV IceCube signal is not simply dominated by a small number of the {gamma}-ray brightest blazars. Instead, a larger number of sources have to contribute to the signal with each individual source having only a small Poisson probability for producing an event in multi-year integrations of current neutrino detectors. Cone search capability for table J/A+A/610/A1/list (List of FITS images)

http://doi.org10.26093/cds/vizier.36100001https://doi.org/http://doi.org/10.26093/cds/vizier.36100001