Giovannini, GabrieleGabrieleGiovanniniSavolainen, T.T.SavolainenORIENTI, MonicaMonicaORIENTINakamura, M.M.NakamuraNagai, H.H.NagaiKino, M.M.KinoGIROLETTI, MARCELLOMARCELLOGIROLETTIHada, K.K.HadaBruni, GabrieleGabrieleBruniKovalev, Y. Y.Y. Y.KovalevAnderson, J. M.J. M.AndersonD'AMMANDO, FILIPPOFILIPPOD'AMMANDOHodgson, J.J.HodgsonHonma, M.M.HonmaKrichbaum, T. P.T. P.KrichbaumLee, S. -S.S. -S.LeeLico, R.R.LicoLisakov, M. M.M. M.LisakovLobanov, A. P.A. P.LobanovPetrov, L.L.PetrovSohn, B. W.B. W.SohnSokolovsky, K. V.K. V.SokolovskyVoitsik, P. A.P. A.VoitsikZensus, J. A.J. A.ZensusTingay, S.S.Tingay2020-11-092020-11-0920182397-3366http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12386/28235Understanding the formation of relativistic jets in active galactic nuclei remains an elusive problem<SUP>1</SUP>. This is partly because observational tests of jet formation models suffer from the limited angular resolution of ground-based very-long-baseline interferometry that has thus far been able to probe the structure of the jet acceleration and collimation region in only two sources<SUP>2,3</SUP>. Here, we report observations of 3C84 (NGC 1275)—the central galaxy of the Perseus cluster—made with an interferometric array including the orbiting radio telescope of the RadioAstron<SUP>4</SUP> mission. The data transversely resolve the edge-brightened jet in 3C84 only 30 μas from the core, which is ten times closer to the central engine than was possible in previous ground-based observations<SUP>5</SUP> and allows us to measure the jet collimation profile from 10<SUP>2</SUP> to 10<SUP>4</SUP> gravitational radii (r<SUB>g</SUB>) from the black hole. The previously found<SUP>5</SUP>, almost cylindrical jet profile on scales larger than a few thousand r<SUB>g</SUB> is seen to continue at least down to a few hundred r<SUB>g</SUB> from the black hole, and we find a broad jet with a transverse radius of ≳250 r<SUB>g</SUB> at only 350 r<SUB>g</SUB> from the core. This implies that either the bright outer jet layer goes through a very rapid lateral expansion on scales ≲10<SUP>2</SUP> r<SUB>g</SUB> or it is launched from the accretion disk.STAMPAenA wide and collimated radio jet in 3C84 on the scale of a few hundred gravitational radiiArticle10.1038/s41550-018-0431-22-s2.0-85048087999000434357700016https://www.nature.com/articles/s41550-018-0431-22018NatAs...2..472GFIS/05 - ASTRONOMIA E ASTROFISICAERC sectors::Physical Sciences and Engineering::PE9 Universe sciences: astro-physics/chemistry/biology; solar systems; stellar, galactic and extragalactic astronomy, planetary systems, cosmology, space science, instrumentation