NASA Logo

NTRS

NTRS - NASA Technical Reports Server

Advisory – Planned Maintenance: On Monday, July 15 at 9 PM Eastern the STI Compliance and Distribution Services will be performing planned maintenance on the STI Repository (NTRS) for approximately one hour. During this time users will not be able to access the STI Repository (NTRS).

Back to Results
Parsec-scale Properties of Steep- and Flat-spectrum Extragalactic Radio Sources from a VLBA Survey of a Complete North Polar Cap SampleWe observed with the Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) at 2.3 and 8.6 GHz a complete flux-density-limited sample of 482 radio sources with decl. > +75° brighter than 200 mJy at 1.4 GHz drawn from the NVSS catalog. A total of 34% of the sources show parsec-scale emission above the flux density detection limit of 30 mJy; their accurate positions and parsec-scale structure parameters are determined. Among all the sources detected at least at the shortest VLBA baselines, the majority, or 72%, have a steep single-dish spectrum. The fraction of the sources with a detectable parsec-scale structure is above 95% among the flat-spectrum objects and close to 25% among the steep-spectrum objects. We identified 82 compact steep-spectrum source candidates, which make up 17% of the sample; most of them are reported for the first time. The compactness and the brightness temperature of the sources in our sample show a positive correlation with single-dish and VLBA spectral indices. All the sources with a significant 8 GHz variability were detected by the VLBA snapshot observations, which independently confirmed their compactness. We demonstrated that 54% of the sources detected by the VLBA at 2.3 GHz in our sample have a steep VLBA spectrum. The compact radio emission of these sources is likely dominated by optically thin jets or mini-lobes, not by an opaque jet core. These results show that future VLBI surveys aimed at searching for new sources with parsec-scale structure should include not only flat-spectrum sources but also steep-spectrum ones in order to reach an acceptable level of completeness.
Document ID
20210011442
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
A V Popkov ORCID
(Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology Dolgoprudnyy, Russia)
Y Y Kovalev ORCID
(Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology Dolgoprudnyy, Russia)
L Y Petrov ORCID
(Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, Maryland, United States)
Yu A Kovalev ORCID
(Astro Space Center Moscow, Russia)
Date Acquired
March 17, 2021
Publication Date
January 28, 2021
Publication Information
Publication: The Astronomical Journal
Publisher: IOP Publishing
Volume: 161
Issue: 2
Issue Publication Date: January 28, 2021
ISSN: 0004-6256
e-ISSN: 1538-3881
Subject Category
Astrophysics
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 281945.02.47.04.83
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Portions of document may include copyright protected material.
Technical Review
External Peer Committee
No Preview Available