![]() | Annu. Rev. Astron. Astrophys. 1980. 18:
321-361 Copyright © 1980 by Annual Reviews. All rights reserved |
We have reviewed in Sections III and
V the suggestion by
Blandford & Rees
(1978)
that in AO 0235+164 and similar objects relativistic jets
may be responsible for beamed polarized optical radiation, as well as
the very high radio brightness temperatures and apparent superluminal
expansion. If the superluminal sources are beamed with cone angle of
~ 1 / , and
5 is required for the
more more rapidly separating
doubles, then for every source beamed toward us there must be
100
sources at the same distance with misdirected beams. Analyzing the
source counts for QSOs,
Scheuer & Readhead
(1979)
identify these two
classes as radio-loud flat-spectrum quasars, and the much larger
number of radio-quiet objects. The radio emission from double-lobe or
extended steep-spectrum sources is not beamed, so the statistics of
occurrence of central flat-spectrum sources in such sources can be
used to measure independently the degree of beaming. Scheuer &
Readhead find
2 by this method.
In this section we consider the arguments that can be made for the rapidly variable, highly polarized optical emission characteristic of blazars being produced in relativistic jets. The situation is closely related to but somewhat different from the radio emission. As we have seen, the ratio of polarized optical flux to high-frequency radio emission varies by over a thousand from flat-spectrum QSOs with no polarized optical emission, through violent QSOs like 3C 345, to weak radio sources like Mkn 421.
From the objects listed in Table 1 we
can distinguish two types that
must be inherently different, irrespective of any possible beaming.
These are the strong emission line objects, and the generally weaker
BL Lac (weak-lined or line-free) types. The first group contains the
violent variable QSOs that are apparently strongly beamed, 3C 345 with
superluminal expansion v = 5c and 3C 279 with
v 10c
(Cotton et al. 1979).
There are also another dozen or so strong-lined sources in
Table 1 for which there is no direct
evidence of relativistic beaming,
but which have similar luminosity and variability of polarized
radiation. The space density out to z = 0.7 of these objects is ~
1/Gpc3, allowing for incomplete coverage in the south. If we
assume that these sources are all beamed towards us with
s of ~ 5 and
corresponding (half) cone angles of 0.2, then the space density of
misdirected sources would be ~ 40/Gpc3. This is close to the
density of 140/Gpc3 found for local QSOs down to the lowest
luminosity class of
Lopt = 1046 ergs s-1 considered by
Schmidt (1978).
Thus we reach a
conclusion similar to that of Scheuer & Readhead. If relativistic
beaming is responsible for the strong polarization seen in some QSOs,
then most QSOs, including radio-quiet ones, must be emitting
misdirected beams of polarized light.
If this picture is correct, then there are some interesting consequences. All these essentially identical strong line objects would be emitting most of their energy in the optical-infrared spectrum as isotropic unpolarized emission with the characteristic complex spectral structure, very possibly from thermal emission in an accretion disk (Shields 1978). The energy in the beam, since it does not swamp the emission lines even when directed toward us, is a small fraction of the QSOs energy budget when Doppler enhancement is accounted for. It may be significant that the maximum luminosity of extended radio sources, ~ 1046 ergs s-1 (Miley 1980), is roughly equal to the power that would be required in a beamed component of a bright blazar. This supports the idea that the same jet is responsible for both phenomena. The scenario of a polarized, low-luminosity source that is relativistically beamed is quite different from that envisioned by Stockman (1978). If the polarized emission were isotropic, then at its brightest it would have a total luminosity equal to that of the brightest known QSOs (~ 1048 ergs s-1). Unpolarized objects could then be explained as objects whose light was produced initially in the same way but was then depolarized and stabilized by scattering.
The situation for the BL Lac objects is not clear. The many similarities in the observed properties suggest we are seeing something closely related to the polarized quasars but without the strong emission lines and associated unpolarized continuum. In terms of the relativistic beam models, it may be that in the strongest BL Lac's, like AO 0235 + 164 or OJ 287, we are viewing directly into a similar beam, and the weaker ones are the same thing viewed from an oblique angle. Alternatively, or in addition, we could be viewing a different population of weaker objects head on.
Direct evidence that our view is sometimes oblique is provided by the two objects that lie at the center of double-lobe radio sources, 1400+162 and 3C 390.3. It is hard to guess what the angle between the lobe axis and the line of sight might be, but at least in 3C 390.3, which has an unusually small ratio of the lobe size to separation (Harris 1972), it would seem that it cannot be small. The fact that in both these objects the polarization is stable in angle and is aligned with the radio axis suggests that the property of stable position angle in many of the fainter BL Lac objects (Section III) may be related to their being viewed obliquely.
In a relativistic jet theory the misdirected jets that we argue must
also be present in radio-quiet quasars could be emitting at the same
strength of radio emission and polarized optical radiation that we see
in BL Lac objects, and would pass unnoticed. The luminosity of the
weaker BL Lacs of 1031 ergs s-1 Hz-1
would be detected at less than 1
mJy for z > 0.3, and the optical polarization could easily be
diluted
to less than 1% by the unpolarized continuum associated with the
emission lines. It is tempting to speculate that the weakly aligned
polarization found in double-lobe radio quasars could be of this
type. If this were correct it would imply that the optical flux is not
extremely dependent on angle, and that relatively low values of
(< 2) are typical.
A case that at least some BL Lac objects are viewed at small angle to the jet axis can be made if we identify the steep-spectrum extended component in some objects as radio doubles seen end on (M.J. Rees, private communication). This idea can be developed as follows. Three of the objects in Table 1 at z < 0.1 show such a component to their radio emission, namely 3C 84, 3C 371, and PKS 0521-36. A lower limit to the typical angle of view of these objects can be derived if we assume they emit the steep-spectrum component isotropically. The space density of all radio sources of similar luminosity is some 30 times greater than that of these objects. Thus if all radio galaxies would show polarized nuclei when viewed end on, then we deduce the typical angle of view for the three objects is ~ 0.25. Larger angles will be needed if only a subset of radio galaxies are involved. If the strong extended component of PKS 0521-36 and 3C 371 were shown to be a halo like 3C 84 and not two lobes closely spaced by foreshortening, this would be strong evidence that these objects were being viewed at close to random angles, since halo sources are rare. On the other hand, if these two sources showed core-jet structure it could indicate that even the low-frequency component is relativistically beamed. Such beaming is required for the strong, steep-spectrum emission of the classic OVV quasars in the statistical analysis of Scheuer & Readhead (1979).
One prediction made by relativistic beam models is that the
fluctuation time scale for relativistic jets seen head on will be more
rapid than when viewed obliquely. The fact that the time scale of one
day for the extremely bright source B2 1308+326 is not markedly
different from much fainter sources is given as an argument against
relativistic beams by
Moore et al. (1980).
However, we note that
rather modest values of
of 2 or 3 give extremely large intensity
enhancement in the forward over oblique directions, while causing
modest changes in time scale. Given our present knowledge of
variability, such changes could easily have escaped notice. In fact
B2 1308+326 has as large an amplitude variation from
day to day (allowing
a factor two for cosmological redshift) as any known object. A good
test of these ideas would be a comparison of the time scales for
changes in the polarization in the most luminous sources with the time
scales in sources where a restricted range of position angle or the
presence of a double radio source indicates an oblique view. In
general, these latter sources are not as well studied as the wildly
varying ones.