Chandra & HST Imaging of the Quasars PKS B0106+013 & 3C345: Inverse Compton X-rays and Magnetized Jets
Preeti Kharb (1), Matthew Lister (2), Herman Marshall (3), and Brandon, Hogan (2,4) ((1) Rochester Institute of Technology, NY (2) Purdue University,, IN (3) Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MA (4) El Camino College,, Marymount College, CA)

TL;DR
This study uses deep Chandra and Hubble observations to analyze the X-ray and optical jets of two quasars, revealing complex jet structures, emission patterns, and constraints on jet speeds and orientations.
Contribution
It provides detailed imaging and analysis of quasar jets, proposing a helical jet model and deriving jet Lorentz factors and inclination angles from multi-wavelength data.
Findings
X-ray emission detected along entire jets with brightening at bends
Optical emission observed at jet termination and hot spots
Jet Lorentz factors estimated between 2.5 and 70
Abstract
We present results from deep (70 ks) Chandra ACIS observations and Hubble Space Telescope ACS F475W observations of two highly optically polarized quasars belonging to the MOJAVE blazar sample, viz., PKS B0106+013 and 1641+399 (3C345). These observations reveal X-ray and optical emission from the jets in both sources. X-ray emission is detected from the entire length of the 0106+013 radio jet, which shows clear bends or wiggles - the X-ray emission is brightest at the first prominent kpc jet bend. A picture of a helical kpc jet with the first kpc-scale bend representing a jet segment moving close(r) to our line of sight, and getting Doppler boosted at both radio and X-ray frequencies, is consistent with these observations. The X-ray emission from the jet end however peaks at about 0.4" (~3.4 kpc) upstream of the radio hot spot. Optical emission is detected both at the X-ray jet…
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