MOJAVE. X. Parsec-Scale Jet Orientation Variations and Superluminal Motion in AGN
M. L. Lister (Purdue U.), M. F. Aller (U. Michigan), H. D. Aller (U., Michigan), D. C. Homan (Denison U.), K. I. Kellermann (NRAO), Y. Y. Kovalev, (ASC Lebedev, MPIfR), A. B. Pushkarev (Pulkovo, CrAO, MPIfR), J. L. Richards, (Purdue U.), E. Ros (U. Valencia, MPIfR)

TL;DR
This study analyzes the parsec-scale kinematics of 200 AGN jets using 15 GHz VLBA data, revealing significant position angle variations, non-ballistic motions, and acceleration in jet features, advancing understanding of jet dynamics and structure.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of jet orientation changes and motions in a large AGN sample, highlighting non-ballistic behavior and variability in jet features for the first time at this scale.
Findings
Most jets show significant position angle variations over 12-16 years.
70% of moving features exhibit accelerations or non-radial motions.
Features generally cluster around a characteristic speed with considerable dispersion.
Abstract
We describe the parsec-scale kinematics of 200 AGN jets based on 15 GHz VLBA data obtained between 1994 Aug 31 and 2011 May 1. We present new VLBA 15 GHz images of these and 59 additional AGN from the MOJAVE and 2 cm Survey programs. Nearly all of the 60 most heavily observed jets show significant changes in their innermost position angle over a 12 to 16 year interval, ranging from 10 deg to 150 deg on the sky, corresponding to intrinsic variations of ~0.5 deg to ~2 deg. The BL Lac jets show smaller variations than quasars. Roughly half of the heavily observed jets show systematic position angle trends with time, and 20 show indications of oscillatory behavior. The time spans of the data sets are too short compared to the fitted periods (5 to 12 y), however, to reliably establish periodicity. The rapid changes and large jumps in position angle seen in many cases suggest that the…
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