A Stationary Core with a One-sided Jet in the Center of M81

  • 25 November 1999
Abstract
The nucleus of M81 was observed at 8.3 GHz with VLBI at 20 epochs over 4.5yrs, with a linear resolution at the source of about 2000 AU or 0.01 pc. Phase-referenced mapping with respect to the geometric center of supernova 1993J enabled us to find, with a standard error of about 600 AU, a stationary point in the source. We identify this point as the location of the core and the putative black hole at the gravitational center of the galaxy. The upper bound on the core's average velocity on the sky is 0.25c. The results are consistent with a model in which plasma condensations with short lifetimes are ejected relativistically from the core on a timescale of less than a few weeks, and then travel along a tube whose pattern and geometry are also variable but only on a timescale of about one year. The central engine of M81 has qualitative similarities to those of powerful the AGN of radio galaxies and quasars, and may also represent in power and size a scaled-up version of the largely hidden nucleus in our own Galaxy.

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