Hubble Space Telescope (HST) observations provide a novel way of testing unified models for FR I radio sources and BL Lac objects. The detection of extended dust discs in some radio galaxies provides information on their jet orientation. Given this, the strength of the compact nuclear sources of FR I and BL Lacs can be compared with model predictions. As a pilot project towards using HST information in testing unified models, we selected five radio galaxies that show extended nuclear discs in the HST images. The relative orientation of the projected radio jets and of the extended nuclear discs indicates that they are not perpendicular, as the simplest geometrical model would suggest, but that they form an angle of similar to 20-40 degrees with the symmetry axis of the disc: a significant change of orientation occurs between the innermost AGN structure and the kiloparsec scale. Nevertheless, the discs appear to be useful indicators of the orientation of the radio source, since the angles formed by the disc axis and the jet with the line of sight differ by only similar to 10-20 degrees.
Testing the FR I/BL Lac unifying model with HST observations / Capetti, A.; Celotti, Anna Lisa. - In: MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY. - ISSN 0035-8711. - 304:2(1999), pp. 434-442. [10.1046/j.1365-8711.1999.02336.x]
Testing the FR I/BL Lac unifying model with HST observations
Celotti, Anna Lisa
1999-01-01
Abstract
Hubble Space Telescope (HST) observations provide a novel way of testing unified models for FR I radio sources and BL Lac objects. The detection of extended dust discs in some radio galaxies provides information on their jet orientation. Given this, the strength of the compact nuclear sources of FR I and BL Lacs can be compared with model predictions. As a pilot project towards using HST information in testing unified models, we selected five radio galaxies that show extended nuclear discs in the HST images. The relative orientation of the projected radio jets and of the extended nuclear discs indicates that they are not perpendicular, as the simplest geometrical model would suggest, but that they form an angle of similar to 20-40 degrees with the symmetry axis of the disc: a significant change of orientation occurs between the innermost AGN structure and the kiloparsec scale. Nevertheless, the discs appear to be useful indicators of the orientation of the radio source, since the angles formed by the disc axis and the jet with the line of sight differ by only similar to 10-20 degrees.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.