论文标题
与中红外核爆发的附近星系的紧凑无线电排放
Compact Radio Emission from Nearby Galaxies with Mid-infrared Nuclear Outbursts
论文作者
论文摘要
我们用中红外(MIR)带的能量核爆发的附近星系样品的VLA进行了5.5 GHz的观测。这些观察结果达到了一个均匀的深度,直至中位数约为10 Ujy,代表了对与核瞬变相关的无线电发射的最敏感的搜索之一。我们在16个星系中的12个水平的水平> 5sigma中检测到无线电发射,对应于75%的检测率。如此高的检测与恒星潮汐破坏事件中以前的类似搜索有很大不同。无线电发射是紧凑的,并且在〜<0.5英寸的大多数来源(<0.9 kpc时<0.9 kpc <0.1时)都无法解决。我们发现有助于无线电发射的恒星形成的可能性很低,但AGN的起源仍然是可见的,特别是表现出与AGN相关的核对源,如果可以在其视频中进行射击。飞机或流出,我们使用与GRB余潮的类比使用爆炸波模型来描述无线电曲线的演变,在这种情况下,观察结果与〜10^{51-52} ERG的能量降低了,在30 \ genth {51-52}观察对于通过检测潜在的通量和光谱进化而解解无线电发射的起源至关重要。
We present 5.5 GHz observations with the VLA of a sample of nearby galaxies with energetic nuclear outbursts at mid-infrared (MIR) bands. These observations reach a uniform depth down to a median rms of ~10 uJy, representing one of most sensitive searches for radio emission associated with nuclear transients. We detect radio emission in 12 out of 16 galaxies at a level of >5sigma, corresponding to a detection rate of 75%. Such a high detection is remarkably different from previous similar searches in stellar tidal disruption events. The radio emission is compact and not resolved for the majority of sources on scales of ~<0.5" (<0.9 kpc at z<0.1). We find the possibility of the star-formation contributing to the radio emission is low, but an AGN origin remains a plausible scenario, especially for sources that show evidence of AGN activity in their optical spectra. If the detections could represent radio emission associated with nuclear transient phenomenon such as jet or outflow, we use the blast wave model by analogy with the GRB afterglows to describe the evolution of radio light curves. In this context, the observations are consistent with a decelerating jet with an energy of ~10^{51-52} erg viewed at 30\degree-60\degree off-axis at later times, suggesting that powerful jets may be ubiquitous among MIR-burst galaxies. Future continuous monitoring observations will be crucial to decipher the origin of radio emission through detections of potential flux and spectral evolution. Our results highlight the importance of radio observations to constrain the nature of nuclear MIR outbursts in galaxies.