4,316 research outputs found
Mean and Extreme Radio Properties of Quasars and the Origin of Radio Emission
We investigate the evolution of both the radio-loud fraction (RLF) and (using
stacking analysis) the mean radio-loudness of quasars. We consider how these
values evolve as a function of redshift and luminosity, black hole (BH) mass
and accretion rate, and parameters related to the dominance of a wind in the
broad emission line region. We match the FIRST source catalog to samples of
luminous quasars (both spectroscopic and photometric), primarily from the Sloan
Digital Sky Survey. After accounting for catastrophic errors in BH mass
estimates at high-redshift, we find that both the RLF and the mean radio
luminosity increase for increasing BH mass and decreasing accretion rate.
Similarly both the RLF and mean radio loudness increase for quasars which are
argued to have weaker radiation line driven wind components of the broad
emission line region. In agreement with past work, we find that the RLF
increases with increasing luminosity and decreasing redshift while the mean
radio-loudness evolves in the exact opposite manner. This difference in
behavior between the mean radio-loudness and the RLF in L-z may indicate
selection effects that bias our understanding of the evolution of the RLF;
deeper surveys in the optical and radio are needed to resolve this discrepancy.
Finally, we argue that radio-loud (RL) and radio-quiet (RQ) quasars may be
parallel sequences but where only RQ quasars at one extreme of the distribution
are likely to become RL, possibly through slight differences in spin and/or
merger history.Comment: 55 pages, 28 figures, accepted to A
Conference Summary: AGN Physics with the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
The ``AGN Physics with the Sloan Digital Sky Survey'' conference was held at
Princeton University in July 2003 to bring together groups working inside and
outside of the SDSS collaboration at radio through X-ray wavelengths to discuss
the common goal of better understanding the physics of Active Galactic Nuclei
(AGN). Although we still do not have a full understanding of AGN, much progress
has been made in recent years. In this conference summary, we concentrate on
those topics discussed at the meeting where we believe that there has been
significant change or where there is a new standard of comparison, as well as
on important new trends in AGN research.Comment: 4 pages, no figures; text now fully matches published versio
The Obscured Fraction of AGN in the XMM-COSMOS Survey: A Spectral Energy Distribution Perspective
The fraction of AGN luminosity obscured by dust and re-emitted in the mid-IR
is critical for understanding AGN evolution, unification, and parsec-scale AGN
physics. For unobscured (Type-1) AGN, where we have a direct view of the
accretion disk, the dust covering factor can be measured by computing the ratio
of re-processed mid-IR emission to intrinsic nuclear bolometric luminosity. We
use this technique to estimate the obscured AGN fraction as a function of
luminosity and redshift for 513 Type-1 AGN from the XMM-COSMOS survey. The
re-processed and intrinsic luminosities are computed by fitting the 18-band
COSMOS photometry with a custom SED-fitting code, which jointly models emission
from: hot-dust in the AGN torus, the accretion disk, and the host-galaxy. We
find a relatively shallow decrease of the luminosity ratio as a function of
Lbol, which we interpret as a corresponding decrease in the obscured fraction.
In the context of the receding torus model, where dust sublimation reduces the
covering factor of more luminous AGN, our measurements require a torus height
which increases with luminosity as h ~ Lbol^{0.3-0.4}. Our obscured
fraction-luminosity relation agrees with determinations from SDSS censuses of
Type-1 and Type-2 quasars, and favors a torus optically thin to mid-IR
radiation. We find a much weaker dependence of obscured fraction on 2-10 keV
luminosity than previous determinations from X-ray surveys, and argue that
X-ray surveys miss a significant population of highly obscured Compton-thick
AGN. Our analysis shows no clear evidence for evolution of obscured fraction
with redshift.Comment: 33 pages, 24 figures, ApJ accepte
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