RULING OUT IC/CMB X-RAYS IN PKS 0637-752 AND THE IMPLICATIONS FOR TEV EMISSION FROM LARGE-SCALE QUASAR JETS

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Date

2015-05-28

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Citation of Original Publication

Eileen T. Meyer et al., RULING OUT IC/CMB X-RAYS IN PKS 0637-752 AND THE IMPLICATIONS FOR TEV EMISSION FROM LARGE-SCALE QUASAR JETS, The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 805, Number 2 (2015), doi : 10.1088/0004-637x/805/2/154

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Abstract

The Chandra X-ray observatory has discovered dozens of resolved, kiloparsec-scale jets associated with powerful quasars in which the X-ray fluxes are observed to be much higher than the expected level based on the radio-optical synchrotron spectrum. The most popular explanation for the anomalously high and hard X-ray fluxes is that these jets do not decelerate significantly by the kiloparsec scale, but rather remain highly relativistic (Lorentz factors Γ ∼10). By adopting a small angle to the line-ofsight, the X-rays can thus be explained by inverse Compton upscattering of CMB photons (IC/CMB), where the observed emission is strongly Doppler boosted. Using over six years of Fermi monitoring data, we show that the expected hard, steady gamma-ray emission implied by the IC/CMB model is not seen in PKS 0637-752, the prototype jet for which this model was first proposed. IC/CMB emission is thus ruled out as the source of the X-rays, joining recent results for the jets in 3C 273 (using the same method; Meyer & Georganopoulos 2014) and PKS 1136-135 (using UV polarization; Cara et al. 2013). We further show that the Fermi observations give an upper limit of δ <6.5 for the four brightest X-ray knots of PKS 0637-752, and derive an updated limit of δ <7.8 for knots A and B1 of 3C 273 (assuming equipartition). Finally, we discuss the fact that high levels of synchrotron X-ray emission in a slow jet will unavoidably lead to a level of angle-integrated TeV emission which exceeds that of the TeV BL Lac class.