Radio-optical scrutiny of compact AGN: Correlations between properties of pc-scale jets and optical nuclear emission
T.G. Arshakian, J. Torrealba, V.H. Chavushyan, E. Ros, M.L. Lister, I., Cruz-Gonz\'alez, and J.A. Zensus

TL;DR
This study investigates the correlations between radio and optical emissions in compact AGN jets, supporting relativistic beaming models and revealing relationships between jet power, optical luminosity, and redshift.
Contribution
It provides new evidence linking parsec-scale jet properties with optical emission and estimates intrinsic jet luminosities and Lorentz factors across different AGN types.
Findings
Significant correlation between optical nuclear luminosity and radio core luminosity in quasars.
Optical continuum emission correlates with jet radio emission in BL Lacs.
Jet kinetic power correlates with radio luminosities, indicating more luminous jets produce brighter extended structures.
Abstract
We study the correlations between the Very Long Baseline Array radio emission at 15 GHz, extended emission at 151 MHz, and optical nuclear emission at 5100 AA for a complete sample of 135 compact jets. We use the partial Kendall's tau correlation analysis to check the link between radio properties of parsec-scale jets and optical luminosities of host AGN. We find a significant positive correlation for 99 quasars between optical nuclear luminosities and total radio (VLBA) luminosities of unresolved cores at 15 GHz originated at milliarcseconds scales. For 18 BL Lacs, the optical continuum emission correlates with the radio emission of the jet at 15 GHz. We suggest that the radio and optical emission are beamed and originate in the innermost part of the sub--parsec-scale jet in quasars. Analysis of the relation between the apparent speed of the jet and the optical nuclear luminosity at…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
