# The TeV-emitting radio galaxy 3C 264. VLBI kinematics and SED modeling

**Authors:** B. Boccardi, G. Migliori, P. Grandi, E. Torresi, F. Mertens, V., Karamanavis, R. Angioni, C. Vignali

arXiv: 1905.06634 · 2019-07-10

## TL;DR

This study combines VLBI radio and X-ray observations to analyze the kinematics and spectral energy distribution of the TeV-emitting radio galaxy 3C 264, revealing jet acceleration, collimation, and magnetic dominance consistent with leptonic emission models.

## Contribution

It provides the first detailed kinematic and SED modeling of 3C 264's jet, linking VLBI and X-ray data to jet dynamics and emission mechanisms in a TeV radio galaxy.

## Key findings

- Jet speeds up to ~11.5c along the edges.
- Jet is strongly limb-brightened and collimating.
- SED modeling supports a magnetically dominated core with a secondary high-energy emission region.

## Abstract

In March 2018, Mukherjee (2018) reported the detection by VERITAS of very-high-energy emission (VHE; > 100 GeV) from 3C 264. This is the sixth, and second most distant, radio galaxy ever detected in the TeV regime. In this article we present a radio and X-ray analysis of the jet in 3C 264. We determine the main physical parameters of the parsec-scale flow and explore the implications of the inferred kinematic structure for radiative models of this gamma-ray emitting jet. The radio data set is comprised of VLBI observations at 15 GHz from the MOJAVE program, and cover a time period of ~2 years. Through a segmented wavelet decomposition method we estimate the apparent displacement of individual plasma features; we then perform a pixel-based analysis of the stacked image to determine the jet shape. The X-ray data set includes all available observations from the Chandra, XMM, and Swift satellites, and is used, together with archival data in the other bands, to build the SED. Proper motion is mostly detected along the edges of the flow, which appears strongly limb-brightened. The apparent speeds increase as a function of distance from the core up to a maximum of ~$11.5$ c. This constrains the jet viewing angle to assume relatively small values ($\theta\lesssim10^{\circ}$). In the acceleration region, extending up to a de-projected distance of ~$4.8\times10^4$ Schwarzschild radii (~$11$ pc), the jet is collimating ($r\propto z^{0.40\pm 0.04}$), as predicted for a magnetically-driven plasma flow. By assuming that the core region is indeed magnetically dominated ($U_B/U_e>1$), the SED and the jet power can be well reproduced in the framework of leptonic models, provided that the high-energy component is associated to a second emitting region. The possibility that this region is located at the end of the acceleration zone, either in the jet layer or in the spine, is explored in the modeling.

## Full text

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## Figures

27 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1905.06634/full.md

## References

91 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1905.06634/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1905.06634