8,127 research outputs found
Are optically-selected QSO catalogs biased ?
A thorough study of QSO-galaxy correlations has been done on a region close
to the North Galactic Pole using a complete subsample of the optically selected
CFHT/MMT QSO survey and the galaxy catalog of Odewahn and Aldering (1995).
Although a positive correlation between bright QSOs and galaxies is expected
because of the magnification bias effect, none is detected. On the contrary,
there is a significant (>99.6%) anticorrelation between z<1.6 QSOs and red
galaxies on rather large angular distances. This anticorrelation is much less
pronounced for high redshift z>1.6 QSOs, which seems to exclude dust as a cause
of the QSO underdensity. This result suggests that the selection process
employed in the CFHT/MMT QSO survey is losing up to 50% of low redshift z<1.6
QSOs in regions of high galaxy density. The incompleteness in the whole z<1.6
QSO sample may reach 10% and have important consequences in the estimation of
QSO evolution and the QSO autocorrelation function.Comment: 17 pages LaTeX (aasms4), plus 6 EPS figures. To be published in the
Astronomical Journa
Quasar-galaxy associations revisited
Gravitational lensing predicts an enhancement of the density of bright,
distant QSOs around foreground galaxies. We measure this QSO-galaxy correlation
w_qg for two complete samples of radio-loud quasars, the southern 1Jy and
Half-Jansky samples. The existence of a positive correlation between z~1
quasars and z~0.15 galaxies is confirmed at a p=99.0% significance level
(>99.9%) if previous measurements on the northern hemisphere are included). A
comparison with the results obtained for incomplete quasar catalogs (e.g. the
Veron-Cetty and Veron compilation) suggests the existence of an `identification
bias', which spuriously increases the estimated amplitude of the quasar-galaxy
correlation for incomplete samples. This effect may explain many of the
surprisingly strong quasar-galaxy associations found in the literature.
Nevertheless, the value of w_qg that we measure in our complete catalogs is
still considerably higher than the predictions from weak lensing. We consider
two effects which could help to explain this discrepancy: galactic dust
extinction and strong lensing.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, MNRAS accepte
R-Band Imaging of Fields Around 1<z<2 Radiogalaxies
We have taken deep -band images of fields around five radiogalaxies:
0956+47, 1217+36, 3C256, 3C324 and 3C294 with . 0956+47 is found to
show a double nucleus. Our data on 1217+36 suggest the revision of its
classification as a radiogalaxy. We found a statistically significant excess of
bright () galaxies on scales of 2 arcmin around the radiogalaxies
(which have ) in our sample. The excess has been determined
empirically to be at level. It is remarkable that this excess
is not present for galaxies within the same area, suggesting that
the excess is not physically associated to the galaxies but due to intervening
groups and then related to gravitational lensing.Comment: 20 pages, uuencoded compressed PostScript including tables. Figures
available upon request. To appear in the March 1995 issue of The Astronomical
Journa
An Unusual Hydrogen Migration/C−H Activation Reaction with Group 3 Metals
A novel hydrogen migration from the phenyl ring to the pyridine ring of an yttrium pyridyl complex supported by a 1,1′-ferrocene diamide ligand is reported. Density functional theory calculations were instrumental in probing the mechanism for this transformation
Inhomogenized sudden future singularities
We find that sudden future singularities may also appear in spatially
inhomogeneous Stephani models of the universe. They are temporal pressure
singularities and may appear independently of the spatial finite density
singularities already known to exist in these models. It is shown that the main
advantage of the homogeneous sudden future singularities which is the
fulfillment of the strong and weak energy conditions may not be the case for
inhomogeneous models.Comment: REVTEX 4, 5 pages, no figures, a discussion of the most general case
include
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