927 research outputs found
Probing the Cosmic X-ray and MeV Gamma-ray Background Radiation through the Anisotropy
While the cosmic soft X-ray background is very likely to originate from
individual Seyfert galaxies, the origin of the cosmic hard X-ray and MeV
gamma-ray background is not fully understood. It is expected that Seyferts
including Compton thick population may explain the cosmic hard X-ray
background. At MeV energy range, Seyferts having non-thermal electrons in
coronae above accretion disks or MeV blazars may explain the background
radiation. We propose that future measurements of the angular power spectra of
anisotropy of the cosmic X-ray and MeV gamma-ray backgrounds will be key to
deciphering these backgrounds and the evolution of active galactic nuclei
(AGNs). As AGNs trace the cosmic large-scale structure, spatial clustering of
AGNs exists. We show that e-ROSITA will clearly detect the correlation signal
of unresolved Seyferts at 0.5-2 keV and 2-10 keV bands and will be able to
measure the bias parameter of AGNs at both bands. Once the future hard X-ray
all sky satellites achieve the sensitivity better than 10^{-12} erg/cm^2/s at
10-30 keV or 30-50 keV - although this is beyond the sensitivities of current
hard X-ray all sky monitors - angular power spectra will allow us to
independently investigate the fraction of Compton-thick AGNs in all Seyferts.
We also find that the expected angular power spectra of Seyferts and blazars in
the MeV range are different by about an order of magnitude, where the Poisson
term, so-called shot noise, is dominant. Current and future MeV instruments
will clearly disentangle the origin of the MeV gamma-ray background through the
angular power spectrum.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Occupation of X-ray selected galaxy groups by X-ray AGN
We present the first direct measurement of the mean Halo Occupation
Distribution (HOD) of X-ray selected AGN in the COSMOS field at z < 1, based on
the association of 41 XMM and 17 C-COSMOS AGN with member galaxies of 189 X-ray
detected galaxy groups from XMM and Chandra data. We model the mean AGN
occupation in the halo mass range logM_200[Msun] = 13-14.5 with a rolling-off
power-law with the best fit index alpha = 0.06(-0.22;0.36) and normalization
parameter f_a = 0.05(0.04;0.06). We find the mean HOD of AGN among central
galaxies to be modelled by a softened step function at logMh > logMmin = 12.75
(12.10,12.95) Msun while for the satellite AGN HOD we find a preference for an
increasing AGN fraction with Mh suggesting that the average number of AGN in
satellite galaxies grows slower (alpha_s < 0.6) than the linear proportion
(alpha_s = 1) observed for the satellite HOD of samples of galaxies. We present
an estimate of the projected auto correlation function (ACF) of galaxy groups
over the range of r_p = 0.1-40 Mpc/h at = 0.5. We use the large-scale
clustering signal to verify the agreement between the group bias estimated by
using the observed galaxy groups ACF and the value derived from the group mass
estimates. We perform a measurement of the projected AGN-galaxy group
cross-correlation function, excluding from the analysis AGN that are within
galaxy groups and we model the 2-halo term of the clustering signal with the
mean AGN HOD based on our results.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journa
AGN clustering in the local Universe: an unbiased picture from Swift-BAT
We present the clustering measurement of hard X-ray selected AGN in the local
Universe. We used a sample of 199 sources spectroscopically confirmed detected
by Swift-BAT in its 15-55 keV all-sky survey. We measured the real space
projected auto-correlation function and detected a signal significant on
projected scales lower than 200 Mpc/h. We measured a correlation length of
r0=5.56+0.49-0.43 Mpc/h and a slope {\gamma}=1.64-0.08 -0.07. We also measured
the auto-correlation function of Type I and Type II AGN and found higher
correlation length for Type I AGN. We have a marginal evidence of luminosity
dependent clustering of AGN, as we detected a larger correlation length of
luminous AGN than that of low luminosity sources. The corresponding typical
host DM halo masses of Swift-BAT are log(MDMH) 12-14 h^-1 M/M_sun, depending on
the subsample. For the whole sample we measured log(MDMH)\sim 13.15 h-1 M/M_sun
which is the typical mass of a galaxy group. We estimated that the local AGN
population has a typical lifetime tau_AGN \sim 0.7 Gyr, it is powered by SMBH
with mass MBH \sim 1-10x10^8 M_\odot and accreting with very low efficiency,
log(epsilon)-2.0. We also conclude that local AGN host galaxies are typically
red-massive galaxies with stellar mass of the order 2-80x10^10 h^-1 M_sun. We
compared our results with clustering predictions of merger-driven AGN
triggering models and found a good agreement.Comment: 13 pages 3 figures, accepted by ApJ Letter
Matter effects on neutrino oscillations in gravitational and magnetic fields
When neutrinos propagate in a background, their gravitational couplings are
modified by their weak interactions with the particles in the background. In a
medium that contains electrons but no muons or taons, the matter-induced
gravitational couplings of neutrinos are different for the various neutrino
flavors, and they must be taken into account in describing the phenomena
associated with the neutrino oscillations in the presence of strong
gravitational fields. Here we incorporate those couplings in that description,
including also the effects of a magnetic field, and consider the implications
that they have for the emission of high energy neutrinos in the vicinity of
Active Galactic Nuclei.Comment: Latex, 12 page
Tau neutrinos from active galactic nuclei
We study the appearance of from active galactic nuclei (AGN)
through neutrino spin-flip. We consider two situations: i) Spin
(flavour)-precession in a reasonable strength of magnetic field in AGN,
ii) Adiabatically resonant conversions caused by an interplay of
and the violation of equivalence principle. Observational
consequences for both situations are discussed.Comment: 6 pages, Latex (uses espcrc2), 1 figure included with epsf, talk
presented at Fifth International Workshop on Tau Lepton Physics (TAU98),
Santander, Spain, 14-17 September, 1998 [to appear in its proceedings in
Nucl. Phys. B (Proc. Suppl.)
Photometric reverberation mapping of 3C120
We present the results of a five month monitoring campaign of the local
active galactic nuclei (AGN) 3C120. Observations with a median sampling of two
days were conducted with the robotic 15cm telescope VYSOS-6 located near Cerro
Armazones in Chile. Broad band (B,V) and narrow band (NB) filters were used in
order to measure fluxes of the AGN and the H_beta broad line region (BLR)
emission line. The NB flux is constituted by about 50% continuum and 50% H_beta
emission line. To disentangle line and continuum flux, a synthetic H_beta light
curve was created by subtracting a scaled V-band light curve from the NB light
curve. Here we show that the H_beta emission line responds to continuum
variations with a rest frame lag of 23.6 +/- 1.69 days. We estimate a virial
mass of the central black hole M_BH = 57 +/- 27 * 10^6 solar masses, by
combining the obtained lag with the velocity dispersion of a single
contemporaneous spectrum. Using the flux variation gradient (FVG) method, we
determined the host galaxy subtracted rest frame 5100A luminosity at the time
of our monitoring campaign with an uncertainty of 10% (L_AGN = 6.94 +/- 0.71*
10^43 ergs^-1). Compared with recent spectroscopic reverberation results, 3C120
shifts in the R_BLR - L_AGN diagram remarkably close to the theoretically
expected relation of R-L^0.5. Our results demonstrate the performance of
photometric AGN reverberation mapping, in particular for efficiently
determining the BLR size and the AGN luminosityComment: 11 pages, 11 figures, Published in Astronomy and Astrophysic
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