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Kinematics of the M87 Jet in the Collimation Zone: Gradual Acceleration and Velocity Stratification

Authors :
Kotaro Niinuma
Jongsoo Kim
Juan-Carlos Algaba
Hyunwook Ro
Sascha Trippe
Fumie Tazaki
Do-Young Byun
Taehyun Jung
Keiichi Asada
Yoshiaki Hagiwara
Chung Sik Oh
Jee Won Lee
Ilje Cho
Duk-Gyoo Roh
Masanori Nakamura
Kazuhiro Hada
Hyo-Ryoung Kim
Se-Jin Oh
Dong-Kyu Jung
Hideyuki Kobayashi
Mareki Honma
Jeffrey A. Hodgson
Motoki Kino
Ju-Yeon Hwang
Zhi-Qiang Shen
Katsunori M. Shibata
Satoko Sawada-Satoh
Yingkang Zhang
Bong Won Sohn
Wu Jiang
Kiyoaki Wajima
Sang-Sung Lee
Jae-Hwan Yeom
Xiaopeng Cheng
Jongho Park
Tao An
Yuzhu Cui
Kazunori Akiyama
Guang-Yao Zhao
Source :
The Astrophysical Journal. 887:147
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Astronomical Society, 2019.

Abstract

We study the kinematics of the M87 jet using the first year data of the KVN and VERA Array (KaVA) large program, which has densely monitored the jet at 22 and 43 GHz since 2016. We find that the apparent jet speeds generally increase from $\approx0.3c$ at $\approx0.5$ mas from the jet base to $\approx2.7c$ at $\approx20$ mas, indicating that the jet is accelerated from subluminal to superluminal speeds on these scales. We perform a complementary jet kinematic analysis by using archival Very Long Baseline Array monitoring data observed in $2005-2009$ at 1.7 GHz and find that the jet is moving at relativistic speeds up to $\approx5.8c$ at distances of $200-410$ mas. We combine the two kinematic results and find that the jet is gradually accelerated over a broad distance range that coincides with the jet collimation zone, implying that conversion of Poynting flux to kinetic energy flux takes place. If the jet emission consists of a single streamline, the observed trend of jet acceleration ($\Gamma\propto z^{0.16\pm0.01}$) is relatively slow compared to models of a highly magnetized jet. This indicates that Poynting flux conversion through the differential collimation of poloidal magnetic fields may be less efficient than expected. However, we find a non-negligible dispersion in the observed speeds for a given jet distance, making it difficult to describe the jet velocity field with a single power-law acceleration function. We discuss the possibility that the jet emission consists of multiple streamlines following different acceleration profiles, resulting in jet velocity stratification.<br />Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ; This is a new version after updating Figure 11 in the manuscript

Details

ISSN :
15384357
Volume :
887
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Astrophysical Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7d31d933e876fd7838004d74ca7ecc43
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ab5584