Opacity in compact extragalactic radio sources and its effect on astrophysical and astrometric studies
Y. Y. Kovalev (MPIfR, ASC Lebedev), A. P. Lobanov (MPIfR), A. B., Pushkarev (MPIfR, Pulkovo, CrAO), J. A. Zensus (MPIfR)

TL;DR
This study investigates the frequency-dependent core shift in parsec-scale radio jets of AGN, revealing its impact on radio and optical astrometry and providing measurements to improve reference frame accuracy.
Contribution
It presents the first systematic measurement of core shifts in a large sample of AGN and discusses implications for astrometric precision and radio-optical position alignment.
Findings
Core shift can reach up to 1.4 mas between 2.3 and 8.6 GHz.
Median core shift in the sample is 0.44 mas.
Estimated radio-optical core shift is approximately 0.1 mas.
Abstract
The apparent position of the "core" in a parsec-scale radio jet (a compact, bright emitting region at the narrow end of the jet) depends on the observing frequency, owing to synchrotron self-absorption and external absorption. While providing a tool probing physical conditions in the vicinity of the core, this dependency poses problems for astrometric studies using compact radio sources. We investigated the frequency-dependent shift in the positions of the cores (core shift) observed with very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) in parsec-scale jets. We discuss related physics, as well as its effect on radio astrometry and the connection between radio and optical positions of astrometric reference objects. We searched for the core shift in a sample of 277 radio sources imaged at 2.3 GHz (13 cm) and 8.6 GHz (4 cm) frequency bands using VLBI observations made in 2002 and 2003. The core…
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