1,213 research outputs found
Submm-bright QSOs at z~2: signposts of co-evolution at high z
We have assembled a sample of 5 X-ray and submm-luminous z~2 QSOs which are
therefore both growing their central black holes through accretion and forming
stars copiously at a critical epoch. Hence, they are good laboratories to
investigate the co-evolution of star formation and AGN. We have performed a
preliminary analysis of the AGN and SF contributions to their UV-to-FIR SEDs,
fitting them with simple direct (disk), reprocessed (torus) and star formation
components. All three are required by the data and hence we confirm that these
objects are undergoing strong star formation in their host galaxies at rates
500-2000 Msun/y. Estimates of their covering factors are between about 30 and
90%. In the future, we will assess the dependence of these results on the
particular models used for the components and relate their observed properties
to the intrinsice of the central engine and the SF material, as well as their
relevance for AGN-galaxy coevolution.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, contributed talk to "Nuclei of Seyfert galaxies
and QSOs - Central engine & conditions of star formation" November 6-8, 2012.
MPIfR, Bonn, Germany. Po
Submm-bright X-ray absorbed QSOs at z~2: insights into the co-evolution of AGN and star-formation
We have assembled a sample of 5 X-ray-absorbed and submm-luminous type 1 QSOs
at which are simultaneously growing their central black holes
through accretion and forming stars copiously. We present here the analysis of
their rest-frame UV to submm Spectral Energy Distributions (SEDs), including
new Herschel data. Both AGN (direct and reprocessed) and Star Formation (SF)
emission are needed to model their SEDs. From the SEDs and their UV-optical
spectra we have estimated the masses of their black holes , their intrinsic AGN bolometric luminosities
, Eddington ratios
and bolometric corrections
. These values are common among optically and
X-ray-selected type 1 QSOs (except for RX~J1249), except for the bolometric
corrections, which are higher. These objects show very high far-infrared
luminosities (2 - 8) and Star Formation
Rates SFRy. From their and the shape of their
FIR-submm emission we have estimated star-forming dust masses of . We have found evidence of a tentative correlation between the
gas column densities of the ionized absorbers detected in X-ray (N)
and . Our computed black hole masses are amongst the most massive known.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, December 22, 2014, 17 pages, 5
figure
Herschel/HerMES: the X-ray–infrared correlation for star-forming galaxies at z ~ 1
For the first time, we investigate the X-ray/infrared (IR) correlation for star-forming galaxies (SFGs) at z ~ 1, using SPIRE submm data from the recently launched Herschel Space Observatory and deep X-ray data from the 2-Ms Chandra Deep Field-North survey. We examine the X-ray/IR correlation in the soft X-ray (SX; 0.5–2 keV) and hard X-ray (HX; 2–10 keV) bands by comparing our z ~ 1 SPIRE-detected SFGs to equivalently IR-luminous (L_(IR) > 10^(10) L_⊙) samples in the local/low-redshift Universe. Our results suggest that the X-ray/IR properties of the SPIRE SFGs are on average similar to those of their local counterparts, as we find no evidence for evolution in the L_(SX)/L_(IR) and L_(HX)/L_(IR) ratios with redshift. We note, however, that at all redshifts, both L_(SX)/L_(IR) and L_(HX)/L_(IR) are strongly dependent on IR luminosity, with luminous and ultraluminous IR galaxies (LIRGs and ULIRGs; L_(IR) > 10^(11) L_⊙) having up to an order of magnitude lower values than normal IR galaxies (L_(IR) < 10^(11) L_⊙). We derive a L_(SX)–L_(IR) relation and confirm the applicability of an existing L_(HX)–L_(IR) relation for both local and distant LIRGs and ULIRGs, consistent with a scenario where X-ray luminosity is correlated with the star formation rate
Local Guarantees in Graph Cuts and Clustering
Correlation Clustering is an elegant model that captures fundamental graph
cut problems such as Min Cut, Multiway Cut, and Multicut, extensively
studied in combinatorial optimization. Here, we are given a graph with edges
labeled or and the goal is to produce a clustering that agrees with the
labels as much as possible: edges within clusters and edges across
clusters. The classical approach towards Correlation Clustering (and other
graph cut problems) is to optimize a global objective. We depart from this and
study local objectives: minimizing the maximum number of disagreements for
edges incident on a single node, and the analogous max min agreements
objective. This naturally gives rise to a family of basic min-max graph cut
problems. A prototypical representative is Min Max Cut: find an cut
minimizing the largest number of cut edges incident on any node. We present the
following results: an -approximation for the problem of
minimizing the maximum total weight of disagreement edges incident on any node
(thus providing the first known approximation for the above family of min-max
graph cut problems), a remarkably simple -approximation for minimizing
local disagreements in complete graphs (improving upon the previous best known
approximation of ), and a -approximation for
maximizing the minimum total weight of agreement edges incident on any node,
hence improving upon the -approximation that follows from
the study of approximate pure Nash equilibria in cut and party affiliation
games
Algorithms for Visualizing Phylogenetic Networks
We study the problem of visualizing phylogenetic networks, which are
extensions of the Tree of Life in biology. We use a space filling visualization
method, called DAGmaps, in order to obtain clear visualizations using limited
space. In this paper, we restrict our attention to galled trees and galled
networks and present linear time algorithms for visualizing them as DAGmaps.Comment: Appears in the Proceedings of the 24th International Symposium on
Graph Drawing and Network Visualization (GD 2016
Traces of co-evolution in X-ray absorbed QSOs with high SFR at z~2
Póster presentado al Workshop Star Formation Across Space and Time, celebrado en Noordwijk (Holanda) del 11 al 14 de noviembre de 2014.Peer Reviewe
The incidence of obscuration in active galactic nuclei
We study the incidence of nuclear obscuration on a complete sample of 1310
AGN selected on the basis of their rest-frame 2-10 keV X-ray flux from the
XMM-COSMOS survey, in the redshift range 0.3<z<3.5. We classify the AGN as
obscured or un-obscured on the basis of either the optical spectral properties
and the overall SED or the shape of the X-ray spectrum. The two classifications
agree in about 70% of the objects, and the remaining 30% can be further
subdivided into two distinct classes: at low luminosities X-ray un-obscured AGN
do not always show signs of broad lines or blue/UV continuum emission in their
optical spectra, most likely due to galaxy dilution effects; at high
luminosities broad line AGN may have absorbed X-ray spectra, which hints at an
increased incidence of small-scale (sub-parsec) dust-free obscuration. We
confirm that the fraction of obscured AGN is a decreasing function of the
intrinsic X-ray luminosity, while the incidence of absorption shows significant
evolution only for the most luminous AGN, which appear to be more commonly
obscured at higher redshift. We find no significant difference between the mean
stellar masses and star formation rates of obscured and un-obscured AGN hosts.
We conclude that the physical state of the medium responsible for obscuration
in AGN is complex, and mainly determined by the radiation environment (nuclear
luminosity) in a small region enclosed within the gravitational sphere of
influence of the central black hole, but is largely insensitive to the wider
scale galactic conditions.Comment: 18 pages, 17 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication by MNRA
Panchromatic spectral energy distributions of Herschel sources
(abridged) Far-infrared Herschel photometry from the PEP and HerMES programs
is combined with ancillary datasets in the GOODS-N, GOODS-S, and COSMOS fields.
Based on this rich dataset, we reproduce the restframe UV to FIR ten-colors
distribution of galaxies using a superposition of multi-variate Gaussian modes.
The median SED of each mode is then fitted with a modified version of the
MAGPHYS code that combines stellar light, emission from dust heated by stars
and a possible warm dust contribution heated by an AGN. The defined Gaussian
grouping is also used to identify rare sources. The zoology of outliers
includes Herschel-detected ellipticals, very blue z~1 Ly-break galaxies,
quiescent spirals, and torus-dominated AGN with star formation. Out of these
groups and outliers, a new template library is assembled, consisting of 32 SEDs
describing the intrinsic scatter in the restframe UV-to-submm colors of
infrared galaxies. This library is tested against L(IR) estimates with and
without Herschel data included, and compared to eight other popular methods
often adopted in the literature. When implementing Herschel photometry, these
approaches produce L(IR) values consistent with each other within a median
absolute deviation of 10-20%, the scatter being dominated more by fine tuning
of the codes, rather than by the choice of SED templates. Finally, the library
is used to classify 24 micron detected sources in PEP GOODS fields. AGN appear
to be distributed in the stellar mass (M*) vs. star formation rate (SFR) space
along with all other galaxies, regardless of the amount of infrared luminosity
they are powering, with the tendency to lie on the high SFR side of the "main
sequence". The incidence of warmer star-forming sources grows for objects with
higher specific star formation rates (sSFR), and they tend to populate the
"off-sequence" region of the M*-SFR-z space.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. Some figures are presented in low
resolution. The new galaxy templates are available for download at the
address http://www.mpe.mpg.de/ir/Research/PEP/uvfir_temp
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