929 research outputs found
The space density of Compton-thick AGN at z~0.8 in the zCOSMOS-Bright Survey
The obscured accretion phase in BH growth is a key ingredient in many models
linking the AGN activity with the evolution of their host galaxy. At present, a
complete census of obscured AGN is still missing. The purpose of this work is
to assess the reliability of the [NeV] emission line at 3426 A to pick up
obscured AGN up to z~1 by assuming that [NeV] is a reliable proxy of the
intrinsic AGN luminosity and using moderately deep X-ray data to characterize
the amount of obscuration. A sample of 69 narrow-line (Type 2) AGN at
z=0.65-1.20 were selected from the 20k-zCOSMOS Bright galaxy sample on the
basis of the presence of the [NeV] emission. The X-ray properties of these
galaxies were then derived using the Chandra-COSMOS coverage of the field; the
X-ray-to-[NeV] flux ratio, coupled with X-ray spectral and stacking analyses,
was then used to infer whether Compton-thin or Compton-thick absorption were
present in these sources. Then the [NeV] luminosity function was computed to
estimate the space density of Compton-thick (CT) AGN at z~0.8. Twenty-three
sources were detected by Chandra, and their properties are consistent with
moderate obscuration (on average, ~a few 10^{22} cm^-2). The X-ray properties
of the remaining 46 X-ray undetected Type 2 AGN were derived using X-ray
stacking analysis. Current data indicate that a fraction as high as ~40% of the
present sample is likely to be CT. The space density of CT AGN with
logL_2-10keV>43.5 at z=0.83 is (9.1+/-2.1) 10^{-6} Mpc^{-3}, in good agreement
with both XRB model expectations and the previously measured space density for
objects in a similar redshift and luminosity range. We regard our selection
technique for CT AGN as clean but not complete, since even a mild extinction in
the NLR can suppress [NeV] emission. Therefore, our estimate of their space
density should be considered as a lower limit.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables, A&A, in pres
The WISSH quasars Project: II. Giant star nurseries in hyper-luminous quasars
Studying the coupling between the energy output produced by the central
quasar and the host galaxy is fundamental to fully understand galaxy evolution.
Quasar feedback is indeed supposed to dramatically affect the galaxy properties
by depositing large amounts of energy and momentum into the ISM. In order to
gain further insights on this process, we study the SEDs of sources at the
brightest end of the quasar luminosity function, for which the feedback
mechanism is supposed to be at its maximum. We model the rest-frame UV-to-FIR
SEDs of 16 WISE-SDSS Selected Hyper-luminous (WISSH) quasars at 1.8 < z < 4.6
disentangling the different emission components and deriving physical
parameters of both the nuclear component and the host galaxy. We also use a
radiative transfer code to account for the contribution of the quasar-related
emission to the FIR fluxes. Most SEDs are well described by a standard
combination of accretion disk+torus and cold dust emission. However, about 30%
of them require an additional emission component in the NIR, with temperatures
peaking at 750K, which indicates the presence of a hotter dust component in
these powerful quasars. We measure extreme values of both AGN bolometric
luminosity (LBOL > 10^47 erg/s) and SFR (up to 2000 Msun/yr). A new relation
between quasar and star-formation luminosity is derived (LSF propto
LQSO^(0.73)) by combining several Herschel-detected quasar samples from z=0 to
4. Future observations will be crucial to measure the molecular gas content in
these systems, probe the impact between quasar-driven outflows and on-going
star-formation, and reveal the presence of merger signatures in their host
galaxies.Comment: 19 pages, 12 figures; Accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysics on June 13, 201
A New All-Sky Catalog of Stars with Large Proper Motions
A new all-sky catalog of stars with proper motions pm>0.15"/yr is presented.
The catalog is largely a product of the SUPERBLINK survey, a data-mining
initiative in which the entire Digitized Sky Surveys are searched for moving
stellar sources. Findings from earlier proper motions surveys are also
incorporated. The new all-sky catalog supersedes the great historic proper
motion catalogs assembled by W. J. Luyten (LHS, NLTT), and provides a virtually
complete (>98%) census of high proper motion stars down to magnitude R=19.Comment: To appear in proceedings of IAU Symposium No. 248 - A Giant Step:
from Milli- to Micro-arcsecond Astrometry, Shangai : China (2007
Blowin' in the wind: both `negative' and `positive' feedback in an obscured high-z Quasar
Quasar feedback in the form of powerful outflows is invoked as a key
mechanism to quench star formation in galaxies, preventing massive galaxies to
over-grow and producing the red colors of ellipticals. On the other hand, some
models are also requiring `positive' AGN feedback, inducing star formation in
the host galaxy through enhanced gas pressure in the interstellar medium.
However, finding observational evidence of the effects of both types of
feedback is still one of the main challenges of extragalactic astronomy, as few
observations of energetic and extended radiatively-driven winds are available.
Here we present SINFONI near infrared integral field spectroscopy of XID2028,
an obscured, radio-quiet z=1.59 QSO detected in the XMM-COSMOS survey, in which
we clearly resolve a fast (1500 km/s) and extended (up to 13 kpc from the black
hole) outflow in the [OIII] lines emitting gas, whose large velocity and
outflow rate are not sustainable by star formation only. The narrow component
of Ha emission and the rest frame U band flux from HST-ACS imaging enable to
map the current star formation in the host galaxy: both tracers independently
show that the outflow position lies in the center of an empty cavity surrounded
by star forming regions on its edge. The outflow is therefore removing the gas
from the host galaxy (`negative feedback'), but also triggering star formation
by outflow induced pressure at the edges (`positive feedback'). XID2028
represents the first example of a host galaxy showing both types of feedback
simultaneously at work.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Mass assembly and AGN activity at in the dense environment of XDCPJ0044.0-2033
XDCP0044.0-2033 is the most massive galaxy cluster known at z>1.5 and its
core shows a high density of galaxies which are experiencing mergers and
hosting nuclear activity. We present a multi-wavelength study of a region
located 157 kpc from the center of this galaxy cluster, for which we have
photometric and spectroscopic multi-wavelength observations (high resolution
HST images in F105W, F140W and F160W bands, NIR KMOS data in H and YJ bands and
Chandra ACIS-S X-ray data). Our main goal is to investigate the environmental
effects acting on the galaxies inhabiting this high density region. We find
that the analyzed region hosts at least nine different sources, six of them
confirmed to be cluster members within a narrow redshift range 1.5728<z<1.5762.
These sources form two different complexes at a projected distance of 13
kpc, which are undergoing merging on an estimated timescale off 10-30 Myr. One
of the sources shows the presence of a broad H alpha emission line and is
classified as Type 1 AGN. This AGN is associated to an X-ray point-like source,
whose emission appears moderately obscured (with intrinsic absorption ) and hosts a relatively massive black hole with mass
, which is accreting with an Eddington ratio of
0.2. We conclude that the analyzed region is consistent with being the
formation site of a secondary BCG. These findings, together with an in-depth
analysis the X-ray morphology of the cluster, suggest a merging scenario of the
entire cluster, with two massive halos both harbouring two rapidly evolving
BCGs on the verge of being assembled. Our results are also consistent with the
scenario in which the AGN phase in member galaxies is triggered by gas-rich
mergers, playing a relevant role in the formation of the red sequence of
elliptical galaxies observed in the center of local galaxy clusters
The Mean Star-Forming Properties of QSO Host Galaxies
Quasi-stellar objects (QSOs) occur in galaxies in which supermassive black
holes (SMBHs) are growing substantially through rapid accretion of gas. Many
popular models of the co-evolutionary growth of galaxies and SMBHs predict that
QSOs are also sites of substantial recent star formation, mediated by important
processes, such as major mergers, which rapidly transform the nature of
galaxies. A detailed study of the star-forming properties of QSOs is a critical
test of such models. We present a far-infrared Herschel/PACS study of the mean
star formation rate (SFR) of a sample of spectroscopically observed QSOs to z~2
from the COSMOS extragalactic survey. This is the largest sample to date of
moderately luminous AGNs studied using uniform, deep far-infrared photometry.
We study trends of the mean SFR with redshift, black hole mass, nuclear
bolometric luminosity and specific accretion rate (Eddington ratio). To
minimize systematics, we have undertaken a uniform determination of SMBH
properties, as well as an analysis of important selection effects within
spectroscopic QSO samples that influence the interpretation of SFR trends. We
find that the mean SFRs of these QSOs are consistent with those of normal
massive star-forming galaxies with a fixed scaling between SMBH and galaxy mass
at all redshifts. No strong enhancement in SFR is found even among the most
rapidly accreting systems, at odds with several co-evolutionary models.
Finally, we consider the qualitative effects on mean SFR trends from different
assumptions about the star-forming properties of QSO hosts and redshift
evolution of the SMBH-galaxy relationship. While limited currently by
uncertainties, valuable constraints on AGN-galaxy co-evolution can emerge from
our approach.Comment: 10 figures, 1 table; accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
School Bike Sharing Program: Will it Succeed?
Encouraging active and sustainable transport modes in order to limit the excessive use of cars, as well as reducing pollutant emissions and creating livable urban environments, has become one of the priorities for policymakers in recent years. The introduction of innovative systems increasingly being introduced in modern cities, such as bike sharing, can certainly contribute to the spread of cycling and thus allow a radical change in the mobility habits of their citizens. This can be especially true for high-school students who are often otherwise accompanied by their parents with private cars. This article aims to assess the influence that a bike sharing program for students has on modal share and on city mobility. As a case study, the city of Palermo was chosen, where the use of the car for home-school trips is prevalent. The "Go2School" project, which involves the creation of a bike sharing program for four schools, with the construction of cycle docks and cycle paths in the nearby areas, will soon become a reality. Thanks to appropriate surveys and questionnaires, a multinomial logit model was calibrated to estimate the modal share towards bike sharing for the students and evaluate the demand for this transport mode
The dense molecular gas in the QSO SDSS J231038.88+185519.7 resolved by ALMA
We present ALMA observations of the CO(6-5) and [CII] emission lines and the
sub-millimeter continuum of the quasi-stellar object (QSO) SDSS
J231038.88+185519.7. Compared to previous studies, we have analyzed a synthetic
beam that is ten times smaller in angular size, we have achieved ten times
better sensitivity in the CO(6-5) line, and two and half times better
sensitivity in the [CII] line, enabling us to resolve the molecular gas
emission. We obtain a size of the dense molecular gas of kpc, and
of kpc for the 91.5 GHz dust continuum. By assuming that CO(6-5) is
thermalized, and by adopting a CO--to-- conversion factor , we infer a molecular gas mass of
. Assuming that the
observed CO velocity gradient is due to an inclined rotating disk, we derive a
dynamical mass of , which is a factor of approximately two smaller than the previously
reported estimate based on [CII]. Regarding the central black hole, we provide
a new estimate of the black hole mass based on the C~IV emission line detected
in the X-SHOOTER/VLT spectrum: . We find a molecular gas fraction of ,
where . We derive a ratio
suggesting high gas turbulence, outflows/inflows
and/or complex kinematics due to a merger event. We estimate a global Toomre
parameter , indicating likely cloud fragmentation. We compare,
at the same angular resolution, the CO(6-5) and [CII] distributions, finding
that dense molecular gas is more centrally concentrated with respect to [CII].
We find that the current BH growth rate is similar to that of its host galaxy.Comment: A&A in pres
AGN X-ray variability in the XMM-COSMOS survey
We took advantage of the observations carried out by XMM in the COSMOS field
during 3.5 years, to study the long term variability of a large sample of AGN
(638 sources), in a wide range of redshift (0.1<z<3.5) and X-ray luminosity
(L(2-10)). Both a simple statistical method to asses the
significance of variability, and the Normalized Excess Variance
() parameter, where used to obtain a quantitative measurement
of the variability. Variability is found to be prevalent in most AGN, whenever
we have good statistic to measure it, and no significant differences between
type-1 and type-2 AGN were found. A flat (slope -0.23+/-0.03) anti-correlation
between and X-ray luminosity is found, when significantly
variable sources are considered all together. When divided in three redshift
bins, the anti-correlation becomes stronger and evolving with z, with higher
redshift AGN being more variable. We prove however that this effect is due to
the pre-selection of variable sources: considering all the sources with
available measurement, the evolution in redshift disappears.
For the first time we were also able to study the long term X-ray variability
as a function of and Eddington ratio, for a large sample of AGN
spanning a wide range of redshift. An anti-correlation between
and is found, with the same slope of the
anti-correlation between and X-ray luminosity, suggesting
that the latter can be a byproduct of the former one. No clear correlation is
found between and the Eddington ratio in our sample.
Finally, no correlation is found between the X-ray and the
optical variability.Comment: 14 Pages, 13 figures. Accepted to the Astrophysical Journal on
December 6, 201
The deficit bias: Candidate gender differences in the relative importance of facial stereotypic qualities for leadership hiring
This is the final version. Available on open access from Wiley via the DOI in this recordData availability: The authors confirm that the data supporting the main findings of this research are available online within the supporting information.Recent findings highlight two facets of the two fundamental stereotype content dimensions of agency (i.e., ‘dominance’ and ‘competence’) and communality (i.e., ‘morality’ and ‘sociability’; e.g., Abele et al., 2016) with implications for understanding gender inequality in the workplace (e.g., Prati et al., 2019). Extending this research and contributing to the facial first impressions literature, we examined how these facets of agency and communality when inferred from White men’s and women’s faces, along with attractiveness, influence their leadership suitability. In three studies in the UK (total N = 424), using student and working samples and two managerial descriptions, we found an unexpected pattern of results, supported by an internal meta-analysis: attractiveness and competence were the most important predictors of hirability for all candidates. For women, dominance was the next most important predictor; for men, morality and sociability were more important than dominance. Moreover, morality and sociability were more important in evaluating men than women, whilst dominance was more important in evaluating women than men. Findings are discussed in terms of a ‘deficit bias’, whereby the qualities women and men are considered to lack – dominance for women, morality and sociability for men – may be given more weight when evaluating their leadership suitability.European CommissionItalian Ministry of Education, Universities and Research (MIUR)European Association of Social Psycholog
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