119 research outputs found
On the role of the environments and star formation for quasar activity
We investigate the host galaxy and environment properties of a sample of 400
low z (<0.5) quasars that were imaged in the SDSS Stripe82. We can detect and
study the properties of the host galaxy for more than 75% of the data sample.
We discover that quasar are mainly hosted in luminous galaxies of absolute
magnitude M* -3 < M(R) < M* and that in the quasar environments the galaxy
number density is comparable to that of inactive galaxies of similar
luminosities. For these quasars we undertake also a study in u,g,r,i and z SDSS
bands and again we discover that the mean colours of the quasar host galaxy it
is not very different with respect to the values of the sample of inactive
galaxies. For a subsample of low z sources the imaging study is complemented by
spectroscopy of quasar hosts and of close companion galaxies. This study
suggests that the supply and cause of the nuclear activity depends only weakly
on the local environment of quasars. Contrary to past suggestions, for low
redshift quasar there is a very modest connection between recent star formation
and the nuclear activity.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, proceedings of the conference "QUASARS at all
cosmic epochs", accepted for publication on Frontiers in Astronomy and Space
Scienc
The black hole mass of BL Lacs from stellar velocity dispersion of the host galaxy
We present the first results from our on-going program to estimate black hole
masses [M(BH)] of nearby BL Lac objects. The estimates are based on stellar
velocity dispersion (sigma) of the BL Lac host galaxies from optical
spectroscopy, and the recently found tight correlation between M{BH} and sigma
in nearby early-type galaxies. For the first three BL Lacs, we find log M(BH) =
7.5 - 8.7 and M(BH)/M(host) = 0.03 - 0.1.Comment: 2 pages, to appear in ESO Astrophysics Symposium "The Mass of
Galaxies at Low and High Redshift", eds. R. Bender & A. Renzin
Near-infrared adaptive optics imaging of high redshift quasars
The properties of high redshift quasar host galaxies are studied, in order to
investigate the connection between galaxy evolution, nuclear activity, and the
formation of supermassive black holes. We combine new near-infrared
observations of three high redshift quasars (2 < z < 3), obtained at the ESO
Very Large Telescope equipped with adaptive optics, with selected data from the
literature. For the three new objects we were able to detect and characterize
the properties of the host galaxy, found to be consistent with those of massive
elliptical galaxies of M(R) ~ -24.7 for the one radio loud quasar, and M(R) ~
-23.8 for the two radio quiet quasars. When combined with existing data at
lower redshift, these new observations depict a scenario where the host
galaxies of radio loud quasars are seen to follow the expected trend of
luminous (~5L*) elliptical galaxies undergoing passive evolution. This trend is
remarkably similar to that followed by radio galaxies at z > 1.5. Radio quiet
quasars hosts also follow a similar trend but at a lower average luminosity
(~0.5 mag dimmer). The data indicate that quasar host galaxies are already
fully formed at epochs as early as ~2 Gyr after the Big Bang and then passively
fade in luminosity to the present epoch.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, 24 pages, 10 figure
ESO VLT Optical Spectroscopy of BL Lac Objects IV. New spectra and properties of the full sample
We present the last chapter of a spectroscopy program aimed at deriving the
redshift or a lower limit to the redshift of BL Lac objects using medium
resolution spectroscopy. Here we report new spectra for 33 BL Lac object
candidates obtained in 2008-2009 confirming the BL Lac nature of 25 sources and
for 5 objects we obtained new redshifts. These new observations are combined
with our previous data in order to construct a homogeneous sample of \sim 70 BL
Lacs with high quality spectroscopy. All these spectra can be accessed at the
website http://www.oapd.inaf.it/zbllac/. The average spectrum, beaming
properties of the full sample, discussion on intervening systems and future
perspectives are addressed.Comment: 25 pages, 13 Figures. Accepted for publication in the Astronomical
Journa
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