The 1.4mm Core of Centaurus A: First VLBI Results from the South Pole Telescope
Publication information:
J. Kim and al. 2018. “The 1.4mm Core of Centaurus A: First VLBI Results from the South Pole Telescope”. ApJ, 861, 129
Abstract
Centaurus A (Cen A) is a bright radio source associated with the nearby galaxy NGC 5128 where high-resolution radio observations can probe the jet at scales of less than a light-day. The South Pole Telescope (SPT) and the Atacama Pathfinder Experiment (APEX) performed a single-baseline very-long-baseline interferometry (VLBI) observation of Cen A in January 2015 as part of VLBI receiver deployment for the SPT. We measure the correlated flux density of Cen A at a wavelength of 1.4 mm on a ∼7000 km (5 Gλ) baseline. Ascribing this correlated flux density to the core, and with the use of a contemporaneous short-baseline flux density from a Submillimeter Array observation, we infer a core brightness temperature of 1.4×1011 K. This is close to the equipartition brightness temperature, where the magnetic and relativistic particle energy densities are equal. Under the assumption of a circular Gaussian core component, we derive an upper limit to the core size φ=34.0±1.8 μas, corresponding to 120 Schwarzschild radii for a black hole mass of 5.5×107M⊙.