259 research outputs found
The energetic Universe
In this paper I review the main topics on the energetic Universe that have
been put forward as main science goals in the Cosmic Vision 2015-2025 exercise.
I discuss the study of matter under extreme conditions (both under strong
gravity and at ultra-high densities), the cosmology of baryons (assembly of
ordinary matter in dark-matter dominated structures and the creation of heavy
elements) and the co-eval growth of super-massive black holes and stars in
galaxies along cosmic history. Most of these topics can be addressed with a
large-aperture deep Universe X-ray space observatory that can be flown soon
after 2015, complemented by gravitational wave observatories (LISA), a
focussing gamma-ray observatory, a far infrared high-sensitivity observatory
and an X-ray survey telescope.Comment: 10 pages, contribution to the 39th ESLAB symposium, ESA-SP (in press
On the Influence of X-Ray Galaxy Clusters in the Fluctuations of the Cosmic Microwave Background
The negative evolution found in X--ray clusters of galaxies limits the amount
of available hot gas for the inverse Compton scattering of the Cosmic Microwave
Background (the Sunyaev--Zel'dovich effect). Using a parametrisation of the
X-ray luminosity function and its evolution in terms of a coalescence model (as
presented in the analysis of a flux limited X-ray cluster sample by Edge et al.
1990), as well as a simple virialised structure for the clusters (which
requires a gas to total mass fraction \approxgt 0.1 in order to reproduce
observed properties of nearby clusters) we show that the Compton distortion
parameter is about two orders of magnitude below the current FIRAS upper
limits. Concerning the anisotropies imprinted on arcmin scales they are
dominated by the hottest undetected objects. We show that they are negligible
({\Delta T\over T}\approxlt 10^{-7}) at wavelengths \lambda\approxgt 1~mm.
At shorter wavelengths they become more important ( at ~mm), but in fact most clusters will produce an
isolated and detectable feature in sky maps. After removal of these signals,
the fluctuations imprinted by the remaining clusters on the residual radiation
are still much smaller. The conclusion is that X-ray clusters can be ignored as
sources of Cosmic Microwave Background fluctuations.Comment: 20 pages Plain Tex, 7 figures available upon request,UCAST-94-0
Soft X-ray background fluctuations and large-scale structure in the Universe
We have studied the fluctuations of the soft (0.9-2 keV) X-ray background
intensity for ~10 arcmin and ~2 arcmin beam sizes, using 80 high galactic
latitude medium-deep images from the ROSAT position sensitive proportional
counter (PSPC). These fluctuations are dominated (and well reproduced) by
confusion noise produced by sources unresolved with the beam sizes we used. We
find no evidence for any excess fluctuations which could be attributed to
source clustering. The 95 per cent confidence upper limits on excess
fluctuations dIclus are: dIclus/Ixrb_10 arcmin<~ 0.12, dIclus/Ixrb_2 arcmin
<~0.07. We have checked the possibility that low surface brightness extended
objects (like groups or clusters of galaxies) may have a significant
contribution to excess fluctuations, finding that they are not necessary to fit
the distribution of fluctuations, and obtaining an upper limit on the surface
density for this type of source. Standard Cold Dark Matter models would produce
dIclus/Ixrb larger than the above limits for any value of the density of the
Universe Omega=0.1-1, unless the bias parameter of the X-ray emitting matter is
smaller than unity, or an important fraction of the sources of the soft X-ray
background (~30 per cent) is at redshifts z>1. Limits on the 2-10 keV excess
fluctuations are also considered, showing that X-ray sources in that band have
to be at redshifts z>1 unless Omega>0.4. Finally, if the spatial correlation
function of the sources that produce these excess fluctuations is instead a
power law, the density contrast drho/rho implied by the excess fluctuations
reveals that the Universe is smooth and linear on scales of tens of Mpc, while
it can be highly non-linear on scales ~1 Mpc.Comment: 10 pages, LaTeX file, epsf.sty and 7 postscript figures. To appear in
MNRAS. Fig. 7 replaced, some references improved, a few corrections to the
tex
Do nuclear starbursts obscure the X-ray background?
We propose a model for the source of the X-ray background (XRB) in which low
luminosity active nuclei (L<10^43 erg/s) are obscured by nuclear starbursts
within the inner 100pc. The obscuring material covers most of the sky as seen
from the central source, rather than being distributed in a toroidal structure,
and hardens the averaged X-ray spectrum by photoelectric absorption. The gas is
turbulent with velocity dispersion of a few 100 km/s and cloud-cloud collisions
lead to copious star formation. Although supernovae tend to produce outflows,
most of the gas is trapped in the gravity field of the starforming cluster
itself and the central black hole. A hot (T=10^6-10^7 K) virialised phase of
this gas, comprising a few per cent of the total obscuring material, feeds the
central engine of 10^7 solar masses through Bondi accretion, at a sub-Eddington
rate appropriate for the luminosity of these objects. If starburst-obscured
objects give rise to the residual XRB, then only 10 per cent of the accretion
in active galaxies occurs close to the Eddington limit in unabsorbed objects.Comment: 5 pages, 2 PS figures included in the text, MNRAS in the press. Also
at http://www.ifca.unican.es/~barcons/preprints.htm
X-ray sources as tracers of the large-scale structure in the Universe
We review the current status of studies of large-scale structure in the X-ray
Universe. After motivating the use X-rays for cosmological purposes, we discuss
the various approaches used on different angular scales including X-ray
background multipoles, cross-correlations of the X-ray background with galaxy
catalogues, clustering of X-ray selected sources and small-scale fluctuations
and anisotropies in the X-ray background. We discuss the implications of the
above studies for the bias parameter of X-ray sources, which is likely to be
moderate for X-ray selected AGN and the X-ray background (~1-2). We finally
outline how all-sky X-ray maps at hard X-rays and medium surveys with large sky
coverage could provide important tests for the cosmological models.Comment: Invited review presented at the Workshop X-ray Astronomy'99: Stellar
endpoints, AGN and the diffuse X-ray background (Astrophys Lett and Comm
Relativistic reflection in the average X-ray spectrum of AGN in the V\'eron-Cetty & V\'eron catalogue
The X-ray spectra of active galactic nuclei (AGN) unveil properties of matter
around the super massive black hole (SMBH). We investigate the X-ray spectra of
AGN focusing on Compton reflection and fluorescence, important processes of
interaction between primary radiation and circum-nuclear material. Unresolved
emission lines (most notably the Fe line) in the X-ray spectra of AGN indicate
that this material is located far away from the SMBH. Contributions from the
inner accretion disk, affected by relativistic effects, have also been detected
in several cases.
We studied the average X-ray spectrum of a sample of 263 X-ray unabsorbed AGN
that yield 419023 counts in the 2-12 keV rest-frame band distributed among 388
XMM-Newton spectra. We fitted the average spectrum using a (basically)
unabsorbed power law (primary radiation). From second model that represents the
interaction of the primary radiation with matter located far away from the
SMBH, we found that it was very significantly detected. Finally, we added a
contribution from interaction with neutral material in the accretion disk close
to the central SMBH, which is therefore smeared by relativistic effects, which
improved the fit at 6 sigma. The reflection factors are 0.65 for the accretion
disk and 0.25 for the torus. Replacing the neutral disk-reflection with
low-ionisation disk reflection, also relativistically smeared, fits the data
equally well, suggesting that we do not find evidence for a significant
ionisation of the accretion disk.
We detect distant neutral reflection in the average spectrum of unabsorbed
AGN with z=0.8. Adding the disk-reflection component associated with a
relativistic Fe line improves the data description at 6 sigma confidence level,
suggesting that both reflection components are present. The disk-reflection
component accounts for about 70 % of the total reflected flux.Comment: Accepted by A&A. 10 pages, 7 figure
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