Gamma-ray emission in radio galaxies under the VLBI scope -- II. The relationship between gamma-ray emission and parsec-scale jets in radio galaxies
R. Angioni, E. Ros, M. Kadler, R. Ojha, C. M\"uller, P.G. Edwards, P., R. Burd, B. Carpenter, M. S. Dutka, S. Gulyaev, H. Hase, S. Horiuchi, F., Krau{\ss}, J. E. J. Lovell, T. Natusch, C. Phillips, C. Pl\"otz, J. F. H., Quick, F. R\"osch, R. Schulz, J. Stevens, A. K. Tzioumis

TL;DR
This study investigates the parsec-scale jet properties of radio galaxies, revealing correlations between radio core emission and gamma-ray detection, and suggesting high-energy emission is linked to jet activity but not solely due to Doppler boosting.
Contribution
It provides the largest combined VLBI and gamma-ray dataset for radio galaxies, analyzing jet kinematics and their relation to gamma-ray emission, including new measurements of superluminal motion.
Findings
Superluminal motion up to 3.6c observed in PKS 2153-69
Higher apparent speeds correlate with distance from the jet core
Gamma-ray detected and undetected radio galaxies show different core flux distributions
Abstract
Following our study of the radio and high-energy properties of -ray-emitting radio galaxies, here we investigate the kinematic and spectral properties of the parsec-scale jets of radio galaxies that have not yet been detected by Fermi-LAT. We take advantage of the regular VLBI observations provided by the TANAMI monitoring program, and explore the kinematic properties of six -ray-faint radio galaxies. We include publicly available VLBI kinematics of -ray-quiet radio galaxies monitored by the MOJAVE program and perform a Fermi-LAT analysis, deriving upper limits. We combine these results with those from our previous paper to construct the largest sample of radio galaxies with combined VLBI and -ray measurements to date. We find superluminal motion up to in the jet of PKS 215369. We find a clear trend of higher apparent speed as…
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.
