R.A. Laing
1, A.H. Bridle
Space Science and Technology Department, CLRC,
Rutherford Appleton Laboratory,
Chilton, Didcot, Oxon OX11 0QX
University of Oxford, Department of Astrophysics, Denys
Wilkinson Building, Keble Road, Oxford OX1 3RH
National Radio Astronomy Observatory, 520 Edgemont Road,
Charlottesville, VA 22903-2475, U.S.A.
MNRAS, in press; accepted 10 June 2002
We conclude that the jets are at 52° to the line of sight,
that they decelerate and that they have transverse velocity gradients.
Their magnetic field configuration has primarily toroidal and longitudinal
components. The jets may be divided into three distinct parts, based not
only on the geometry of their outer isophotes, but also on their
kinematics and emissivity distributions: a well-collimated inner region; a
flaring region of rapid expansion followed by recollimation and a conical
outer region. The inner region is poorly resolved, but is best modelled as
the sum of fast (0.8 - 0.9c) and much slower components. The transition
between inner and flaring regions marks a discontinuity in the flow where
the emissivity increases suddenly. The on-axis velocity stays fairly
constant at
0.8c until the end of the flaring region, where it
drops abruptly to
0.55c, thereafter falling more slowly to
0.25c at the end of the modelled region. Throughout the flaring
and outer regions, the velocity at the edge of the jet is
0.7 of
its on-axis value. The magnetic field in the flaring region is complex,
with an essentially isotropic structure at the edge of the jet, but a more
ordered toroidal+longitudinal configuration on-axis. In the outer region,
the radial field vanishes and the toroidal component becomes dominant. We
show that the emissivity and field structures are inconsistent with simple
adiabatic models in the inner and flaring regions. We suggest that the
discontinuity between the inner and flaring regions could be associated
with a stationary shock structure and that the inferred transverse
velocity profiles and field structure in the flaring region support the
idea that the jets decelerate by entraining the external medium. We
demonstrate the appearance of our model at other angles to the line of
sight and argue that other low-luminosity radio galaxies resemble 3C31
seen at different orientations.
galaxies: jets - radio continuum:galaxies - magnetic fields - polarization - MHD