1,666 research outputs found
Spectroastrometry of rotating gas disks for the detection of supermassive black holes in galactic nuclei. III. CRIRES observations of the Circinus galaxy
We present new CRIRES spectroscopic observations of BrGamma in the nuclear
region of the Circinus galaxy, obtained with the aim of measuring the black
hole (BH) mass with the spectroastrometric technique. The Circinus galaxy is an
ideal benchmark for the spectroastrometric technique given its proximity and
secure BH measurement obtained with the observation of its nuclear H2O maser
disk. The kinematical data have been analyzed both with the classical method
based on the analysis of the rotation curves and with the new method developed
by us and based on spectroastrometry. The classical method indicates that the
gas disk rotates in the gravitational potential of an extended stellar mass
distribution and a spatially unresolved mass of (1.7 +- 0.2) 10^7 Msun,
concentrated within r < 7 pc. The new method is capable of probing gas rotation
at scales which are a factor ~3.5 smaller than those probed by the rotation
curve analysis. The dynamical mass spatially unresolved with the
spectroastrometric method is a factor ~2 smaller, 7.9 (+1.4 -1.1) 10^6 Msun
indicating that spectroastrometry has been able to spatially resolve the
nuclear mass distribution down to 2 pc scales. This unresolved mass is still a
factor ~4.5 larger than the BH mass measurement obtained with the H2O maser
emission indicating that it has not been possible to resolve the sphere of
influence of the BH. Based on literature data, this spatially unresolved
dynamical mass distribution is likely dominated by molecular gas and it has
been tentatively identified with the circum-nuclear torus which prevents a
direct view of the central BH in Circinus. This mass distribution, with a size
of ~2pc, is similar in shape to that of the star cluster of the Milky Way
suggesting that a molecular torus, forming stars at a high rate, might be the
earlier evolutionary stage of the nuclear star clusters which are common in
late type spirals.Comment: A&A in press. We wish to honor the memory of our great friend and
colleague David Axon. He will be greatly missed by all of us. arXiv admin
note: text overlap with arXiv:1110.093
Models relating the radio emission and ionised gas in Seyfert nuclei
Possible models are discussed in which the radio emitting components in Seyfert II nuclei can compress and accelerate the ambient nuclear medium to produce the characteristics of the narrow line region. A first order model, which considers only the expansion of the radio components, is briefly described. However, in many Seyfert nuclei it appears that the linear motion of the radio components is also important. This can result in shock heating of the ambient medium, and if the cooling time is long enough, can lead to a displacement between the radio component and the associated emission lines. This effect may be present in NGC 1068 and NGC 5929 and by considering ram pressure balance and the cooling length it is possible to estimate lobe velocities and ambient densities
Beyond personality: exploring the role of motivations, self-evaluations and values in leadership emergence within an organizational setting
The current research explored personality and non-personality constructs in relation to leadership emergence. Managers of a UK insurance company completed a self-report survey on leadership behaviours. Analyses of over one hundred participants demonstrated significant associations between emergence and many variables (e.g. extraversion, motivation, and leader-member relationships). Practical implications (i.e. in leadership selection and development) are discussed, and recommendations presented. Further research combining dispositional and situational factors in emergence is advised, as are longitudinal studies employing multiple methodologies across a diverse sample
Polarization Profiles of Scattered Emission Lines. II. Upstream Dust Scattering in the HH 1 Jet
Detailed comparisons are made between observations of scattered light
upstream of the head of the HH~1 jet and predictions of simple scattering
models. It is shown that, in order to unambiguously determine the velocity of
the head of the jet (bow shock) with respect to the upstream dust, existing
spectroscopic observations are insufficient and that spectropolarimetric
observations of the scattered light are necessary. Such an independent measure
of the bow shock velocity is important in order to test ``multiple outflow''
theories of Herbig-Haro jets. It is also shown 2that the scattering dust must
have a very forward-throwing scattering phase function
(\langle\cos\theta\rangle\msim 0.7) and slight evidence is found for a
dust-gas ratio that is higher than average.Comment: 11 pages, uuencoded compressed postscript (including 9 figures),
accepted for publication in Ap.J., IAUNAM_contrib.#34
The morphology of Sersic-Pastoriza galaxies
The authors present the preliminary results of their radio-continuum and neutral hydrogen observations of Sersic-Pastoriza (S-P) galaxies. They show that the central regions contain a population of compact features thought to be young supernova remnants (SNRs) and discuss the overall morphology of the nuclei
HST and Spitzer point source detection and optical extinction in powerful narrow-line radio galaxies
We present the analysis of infrared HST and Spitzer data for a sample of 13
FRII radio galaxies at 0.03<z<0.11 that are classified as narrow-line radio
galaxies (NLRG). In the context of the unified schemes for active galactic
nuclei (AGN), our direct view of the AGN in NLRG is impeded by a parsec-scale
dusty torus structure. Our high resolution infrared observations provide new
information about the degree of extinction induced by the torus, and the
incidence of obscured AGN in NLRG.
We find that the point-like nucleus detection rate increases from 25 per cent
at 1.025m, to 80 per cent at 2.05m, and to 100 per cent at 8.0m.
This supports the idea that most NLRG host an obscured AGN in their centre. We
estimate the extinction from the obscuring structures using X-ray, near-IR and
mid-IR data. We find that the optical extinction derived from the 9.7m
silicate absorption feature is consistently lower than the extinction derived
using other techniques. This discrepancy challenges the assumption that all the
mid-infrared emission of NLRG is extinguished by a simple screen of dust at
larger radii. This disagreement can be explained in terms of either weakening
of the silicate absorption feature by (i) thermal mid-IR emission from the
narrow-line region, (ii) non-thermal emission from the base of the radio jets,
or (iii) by direct warm dust emission that leaks through a clumpy torus without
suffering major attenuation.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figures, 8 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA
Recoiling Supermassive Black Holes: a search in the Nearby Universe
The coalescence of a binary black hole can be accompanied by a large
gravitational recoil due to anisotropic emission of gravitational waves. A
recoiling supermassive black hole (SBH) can subsequently undergo long-lived
oscillations in the potential well of its host galaxy, suggesting that offset
SBHs may be common in the cores of massive ellipticals. We have analyzed HST
archival images of 14 nearby core ellipticals, finding evidence for small
( pc) displacements between the AGN (locating the SBH) and the
center of the galaxy (the mean photocenter) in 10 of them. Excluding objects
that may be affected by large-scale isophotal asymmetries, we consider six
galaxies to have detected displacements, including M87, where a displacement
was previously reported by Batcheldor et al. 2010. In individual objects, these
displacements can be attributed to residual gravitational recoil oscillations
following a major or minor merger within the last few Gyr. For plausible merger
rates, however, there is a high probability of larger displacements than those
observed, if SBH coalescence took place in these galaxies. Remarkably, the
AGN-photocenter displacements are approximately aligned with the radio source
axis in four of the six galaxies with displacements, including three of the
four having relatively powerful kpc-scale jets. This suggests intrinsic
asymmetries in radio jet power as a possible displacement mechanism, although
approximate alignments are also expected for gravitational recoil. Orbital
motion in SBH binaries and interactions with massive perturbers can produce the
observed displacement amplitudes but do not offer a ready explanation for the
alignments.Comment: 58 pages, 32 figures, 9 tables. Accepted for publication in Ap
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