310 research outputs found
On the Effects of Dissipative Turbulence on the Narrow Emission-Line Ratios in Seyfert Galaxies
We present a photoionization model study of the effects of micro-turbulence
and dissipative heating on emission lines for number and column densities,
elemental abundances, and ionizations typical for the narrow emission line
regions (NLRs) of Seyfert galaxies. Earlier studies of NLR spectra generally
found good agreement between the observations and the model predictions for
most strong emission lines, such as [O III] 5007, [O II]
3727, [N II] 6583, [Ne III] 3869, and the H and He
recombination lines. Nevertheless, the strengths of lines from species with
ionization potentials greater than that of He(54.4 eV), e.g. N and
Ne, were often under-predicted. Among the explanations suggested for
these discrepancies were (selectively) enhanced elemental abundances and
contributions from shock heated gas. Interestingly, the NLR lines have widths
of several 100 km s, well in excess of the thermal broadening. If this
is due to micro-turbulence, and the turbulence dissipates within the
emission-line gas, the gas can be heated in excess of that due to
photoionization. We show that the combined effects of turbulence and
dissipative heating can strongly enhance N V 1240 (relative to He II
1640), while the heating alone can boost the strength of [Ne V]
3426. We suggest that this effect is present in the NLR, particularly
within 100 pc of the central engine. Finally, since micro-turbulence
would make clouds robust against instabilities generated during acceleration,
it is not likely to be a coincidence that the radially outflowing emission-line
gas is turbulent.Comment: 29 oages, including 10 figures. Accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
Strategies for Supporting Smoking Cessation Among Indigenous Fathers: A Qualitative Participatory Study
© The Author(s) 2019. There is a need for tailored smoking cessation programs specifically for Indigenous fathers who want to quit smoking.The aim of this study was to engage Indigenous men and key informants in guiding cultural adaptations to the Dads in Gear (DIG) cessation program. In Phase 1 of this qualitative participatory study, Indigenous men were engaged in group sessions and key informants in semistructured interviews to gather advice related to cultural adaptations to the DIG program. These data were used to guide the development of program prototypes. In Phase 2, the prototypes were evaluated with Indigenous fathers who were using tobacco (smoking or chewing) or were ex-users. Data were analyzed inductively. Recommendations for programming included ways to incorporate cultural values and practices to advance men’s cultural knowledge and the need for a flexible program design to enhance feasibility and acceptability among diverse Indigenous groups. Men also emphasized the importance of positive message framing, building trust by providing “honest information,” and including activities that enabled discussions about their aspirations as fathers as well as cultural expectations of current-day Indigenous men. That the Indigenous men’s level of involvement with their children was diverse but generally less prescriptive than contemporary “involved fathering” discourse was also a key consideration in terms of program content. Strategies were afforded by these insights for meeting the men where they are in terms of their fathering—as well as their smoking and physical activity. This research provides a model for developing evidence-based, gender-specific health promotion programs with Indigenous men
Magnetic Confinement, MHD Waves, and Smooth Line Profiles in AGN
In this paper, we show that if the broad line region clouds are in
approximate energy equipartition between the magnetic field and gravity, as
hypothesized by Rees, there will be a significant effect on the shape and
smoothness of broad emission line profiles in active galactic nuclei. Line
widths of contributing clouds or flow elements are much wider than their
thermal widths, due to the presence of non-dissipative MHD waves, and their
collective contribution produce emission line profiles broader and smoother
than would be expected if a magnetic field were not present. As an
illustration, a simple model of isotropically emitting clouds, normally
distributed in velocity, is used to show that smoothness can be achieved for
less than 80,000 clouds and may even be as low as a few hundred. We conclude
that magnetic confinement has far reaching consequences for observing and
modeling active galactic nuclei.Comment: to appear in MNRA
Luminosity indicators in dusty photoionized environments
The luminosity of the central source in ionizing radiation is an essential
parameter in a photoionized environment, and one of the most fundamental
physical quantities one can measure. We outline a method of determining
luminosity for any emission-line region using only infrared data. In dusty
environments, grains compete with hydrogen in absorbing continuum radiation.
Grains produce infrared emission, and hydrogen produces recombination lines. We
have computed a very large variety of photoionization models, using ranges of
abundances, grain mixtures, ionizing continua, densities, and ionization
parameters. The conditions were appropriate for such diverse objects as H II
regions, planetary nebulae, starburst galaxies, and the narrow and broad line
regions of active nuclei. The ratio of the total thermal grain emission
relative to H (IR/H) is the primary indicator of whether the
cloud behaves as a classical Str\"{o}mgren sphere (a hydrogen-bounded nebula)
or whether grains absorb most of the incident continuum (a dust-bounded
nebula). We find two global limits: when infrared recombination
lines determine the source luminosity in ionizing photons; when
the grains act as a bolometer to measure the luminosity.Comment: 12 pages 3 figures. Accepted ASP Sept.9
Investigation of prediction methods for the loads and stresses of Apollo type spacecraft parachutes. Volume 2: Stresses
For abstract, see N74-19673
Complex X-ray Absorption and the Fe Kalpha Profile in NGC 3516
We present data from simultaneous Chandra, XMM-Newton and BeppoSAX
observations of the Seyfert 1 galaxy NGC 3516, taken during 2001 April and Nov.
We have investigated the nature of the very flat observed X-ray spectrum.
Chandra grating data show the presence of X-ray absorption lines, revealing two
distinct components of the absorbing gas, one which is consistent with our
previous model of the UV/X-ray absorber while the other, which is outflowing at
a velocity of ~1100 km/s has a larger column density and is much more highly
ionized. The broad-band spectral characteristics of the X-ray continuum
observed with XMM during 2001 April, reveal the presence of a third layer of
absorption consisting of a very large column (~2.5 x 10E23 cm^-2) of highly
ionized gas with a covering fraction ~50%. This low covering fraction suggests
that the absorber lies within a few lt-days of the X-ray source and/or is
filamentary in structure. Interestingly, these absorbers are not in thermal
equilibrium with one another. The two new components are too highly ionized to
be radiatively accelerated, which we suggest is evidence for a hydromagnetic
origin for the outflow. Applying our model to the Nov dataset, we can account
for the spectral variability primarily by a drop in the ionization states of
the absorbers, as expected by the change in the continuum flux. When this
complex absorption is accounted for we find the underlying continuum to be
typical of Seyfert 1 galaxies. The spectral curvature attributed to the high
column absorber, in turn, reduces estimates of the flux and extent of any broad
Fe emission line from the accretion disk.Comment: 33 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Multi-dimensional modelling of X-ray spectra for AGN accretion-disk outflows III: application to a hydrodynamical simulation
We perform multi-dimensional radiative transfer simulations to compute
spectra for a hydrodynamical simulation of a line-driven accretion disk wind
from an active galactic nucleus. The synthetic spectra confirm expectations
from parameterized models that a disk wind can imprint a wide variety of
spectroscopic signatures including narrow absorption lines, broad emission
lines and a Compton hump. The formation of these features is complex with
contributions originating from many of the different structures present in the
hydrodynamical simulation. In particular, spectral features are shaped both by
gas in a successfully launched outflow and in complex flows where material is
lifted out of the disk plane but ultimately falls back. We also confirm that
the strong Fe Kalpha line can develop a weak, red-skewed line wing as a result
of Compton scattering in the outflow. In addition, we demonstrate that X-ray
radiation scattered and reprocessed in the flow has a pivotal part in both the
spectrum formation and determining the ionization conditions in the wind. We
find that scattered radiation is rather effective in ionizing gas which is
shielded from direct irradiation from the central source. This effect likely
makes the successful launching of a massive disk wind somewhat more challenging
and should be considered in future wind simulations.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication by MNRA
Dynamics of Warm-Absorbing Gas in Seyfert Galaxies: NGC 5548
A hydromagnetic (MHD) wind from a clumpy molecular accretion disk is invoked
to explain observations of warm absorbing (WA) gas in UVX from Sy galaxies.
This paper focuses on two issues: (1) compatibility of kinematics and dynamics
of MHD wind with the observed properties of WAs; and (2) relationship between
the UVX absorptions. We provide an in-depth comparison between the MHD model
and the Sy 1 galaxy NGC 5548, which at high spectral resolution exhibits a
number of discrete UV absorption components. We find that: (1) the total column
densities of Ovii, Oviii and H, are reproduced by constraining the UV ion
column densities of Civ and Nv in each component to lie within a factor of 2 of
their observed values and optimizing over the possible sets of component
ionization states and Civ column densities; (2) the WA exists in the outer part
of the wind and is not a continuation of the flow in the BLR; and (3) the WA
extends in radial and polar directions and is ionization-stratified. X-ray
absorption is found to be heavily biased towards smaller r, and UV absorption
originates at larger distances from the central continuum source. We show that
the discrete absorption components along the line-of-sight are intrinsically
clumpy. Density differences between kinematic components result in a range of
ionization and recombination timescales. We further test the applicability of
the MHD wind to WAs in general, by constructing a quasi-continuous flow model,
and extending it to arbitrary aspect angles. We estimate the fraction of Sy 1s
having detectable WAs with larger Ovii column density than Oviii, and the range
of total H column densities. We also find that the ratio of Ovii to Oviii
optical depths can serve as a new diagnostic of AGN aspect angle.Comment: Latex, 8 postscript figures. Astrophysical Journal, 536, June 10, in
pres
X-Ray/Ultraviolet Observing Campaign of the Markarian 279 Active Galactic Nucleus Outflow: a close look at the absorbing/emitting gas with Chandra-LETGS
We present a Chandra-LETGS observation of the Seyfert 1 galaxy Mrk 279. This
observation was carried out simultaneously with HST-STIS and FUSE, in the
context of a multiwavelength study of this source. The Chandra pointings were
spread over ten days for a total exposure time of ~360 ks. The spectrum of
Mrk279 shows evidence of broad emission features, especially at the wavelength
of the OVII triplet. We quantitatively explore the possibility that this
emission is produced in the broad line region (BLR). We modeled the broad UV
emission lines seen in the FUSE and HST-STIS spectra following the ``locally
optimally emitting cloud" approach. We find that the X-ray lines luminosity
derived from the best fit BLR model can match the X-ray features, suggesting
that the gas producing the UV lines is sufficient to account also for the X-ray
emission. The spectrum is absorbed by ionized gas whose total column density is
~5x10^{20} cm^{-2}. The absorption spectrum can be modeled by two distinct gas
components (log xi ~ 0.47 and 2.49, respectively) both showing a significant
outflow velocity. However, the data allow also the presence of intermediate
ionization components. The distribution of the column densities of such extra
components as a function of the ionization parameter is not consistent with a
continuous, power law-like, absorber, suggesting a complex structure for the
gas outflow for Mrk 279 (abridged).Comment: 16 pages, 12 figures. To appear in A&
On the Location and Composition of the Dust in the MCG-6-30-15 Warm Absorber
Hubble Space Telescope images of MCG-6-30-15 show a dust lane crossing the
galaxy just below the nucleus. In this paper, we argue that this dust lane is
responsible for the observed reddening of the nuclear emission and the Fe I
edge hinted at in the Chandra spectrum of MCG-6-30-15. We further suggest that
the gas within the dust lane can comprise much of the low ionization component
(i.e., the one contributing the O VII edge) of the observed warm absorber.
Moreover, placing the warm absorbing material at such distances (hundreds of
pc) can account for the small outflow velocities of the low ionization
absorption lines as well as the constancy of the O VIII edge. Photoionization
models of a dusty interstellar gas cloud (with a column appropriate for the
reddening toward MCG-6-30-15) using a toy Seyfert 1 spectral energy
distribution show that it is possible to obtain a significant O VII edge
(\tau~0.2) if the material is ~150 pc from the ionizing source. For
MCG-6-30-15, such a distance is consistent with the observed dust lane. The
current data on MCG-6-30-15 is unable to constrain the dust composition within
the warm absorber. Astronomical silicate is a viable candidate, but there are
indications of a very low O abundance in the dust, which is inconsistent with a
silicate origin. If true, this may indicate that there were repeated cycles of
grain destruction and growth from shocks in the interstellar medium of
MCG-6-30-15. Pure iron grains are an unlikely dust constituent due to the limit
on their abundance in the Galaxy, yet they cannot be ruled out. The high column
densities inferred from the highly ionized zone of the warm absorber implies
that this gas is dust-free.Comment: 7 pages, 3 Figures, A&A accepte
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