Dr. Eileen Meyer, along with her PhD student Peter
Breiding and Dr. Markos Georganopoulos and other colleagues has a new
paper published in the Astrophysical Journal. Using images from the new
Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) in Chile, the team
has verified the synchrotron spectrum from a 300,000 light-year long
plasma jet for the first time at sub-millimeter wavelengths. These
observations lead to a direct test of the popular "inverse-Compton of
the CMB (IC/CMB)” model for X-ray emission in these jets, in conjunction
with NASA’s Fermi gamma-ray space telescope. P. Breiding lead the
effort to push the limits of observation with Fermi to show that the
gamma-ray emission predicted by the ALMA observations is not detected,
invalidating the IC/CMB model at the 8.7 sigma level. These findings
were published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters, Volume 835, Issue
2, article id. L35, 6 pp. (2017).
Four-panel
figure showing the same jet at different wavelengths. In all cases,
the green contours represent the radio image at 17 GHz. At top right,
the X-ray emission from the jet, as seen by the Chandra X-ray
Observatory, and in the other panels the new ALMA observations in bands 3
(100 GHz), 6 (233 GHz) and 7 (345 GHz). From Meyer et al.,(2017).