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The Time Scale of Decimetre Flux Density Variations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 April 2016
Extract
One of the critical parameters for a theory of emission from QSOs is the time scale of the variations in this emission. For many sources, changes occur faster than the light travel time across the source disk size as determined by VLBI observations. If the decimetre flux density is assumed to come from a small core, appropriate to the time scale of its variations then the brightness temperature must be far greater than ~ 1012 K allowed by the incoherent synchrotron process. These difficulties have been examined (Jones and Burbidge 1973; Burbidge and Stein 1975) using the QSO 2251 + 158 (3C454.3) as an example against which to test the theory. In this paper, I examine the time scale of the variations in 46 sources and show that most of these vary significantly within 2 years. The most rapid changes are in the QSOs 0736 + 017 and 1504–166 which have changed 40% within a few months — an order of magnitude faster than 2251 + 158.
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- Extra-galactic
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- Copyright © Astronomical Society of Australia 1978
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