5,812 research outputs found
Space VLBI Observations Show in the Quasar NRAO 530
We present here space-based VLBI observations with VSOP and a southern
hemisphere ground array of the gamma-ray blazar NRAO 530 at 1.6 GHz and 5 GHz.
The brightness temperature of the core at 1.6 GHz is K. The
size is near the minimum observable value in the direction of NRAO~530 due to
interstellar scattering. The 5 GHz data show a single component with a
brightness temperature of K, significantly in excess of
the inverse Compton limit and of the equipartition brightness temperature limit
(Readhead 1994). This is strong evidence for relativistic motion in a jet
requiring model-dependent Doppler boosting factors in the range 6 to 60. We
show that a simple homogeneous sphere probably does not model the emission
region accurately. We favor instead an inhomogeneous jet model with a Doppler
boosting factor of 15.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Color bimodality: Implications for galaxy evolution
We use a sample of 69726 galaxies from the SDSS to study the variation of the
bimodal color-magnitude (CM) distribution with environment. Dividing the galaxy
population by environment (Sigma_5) and luminosity (-23<M_r<-17), the u-r color
functions are modeled using double-Gaussian functions. This enables a
deconvolution of the CM distributions into two populations: red and blue
sequences. The changes with increasing environmental density can be separated
into two effects: a large increase in the fraction of galaxies in the red
distribution, and a small color shift in the CM relations of each distribution.
The average color shifts are 0.05+-0.01 and 0.11+-0.02 for the red and blue
distributions, respectively, over a factor of 100 in projected neighbor
density. The red fraction varies between about 0% and 70% for low-luminosity
galaxies and between about 50% and 90% for high-luminosity galaxies. This
difference is also shown by the variation of the luminosity functions with
environment. We demonstrate that the effects of environment and luminosity can
be unified. A combined quantity, Sigma_mod = Sigma_5/Mpc^{-2} + L_r/L_{-20.2},
predicts the fraction of red galaxies, which may be related to the probability
of transformation events. Our results are consistent with major interactions
(mergers and/or harassment) causing galaxies to transform from the blue to the
red distribution. We discuss this and other implications for galaxy evolution
from earlier results and model the effect of slow transformations on the color
functions.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures, in AIP Conf. Proc., The New Cosmology, eds. R.
E. Allen et al. (aka. The Mitchell Symposium), see
http://proceedings.aip.org/proceedings/confproceed/743.jsp ; v2: replaced
Figure 5 which was incomplete in original submissio
The Allen Telescope Array Twenty-centimeter Survey -- A 700-Square-Degree, Multi-Epoch Radio Dataset -- II: Individual Epoch Transient Statistics
We present our second paper on the Allen Telescope Array Twenty-centimeter
Survey (ATATS), a multi-epoch, ~700 sq. deg. radio image and catalog at 1.4
GHz. The survey is designed to detect rare, bright transients as well as to
commission the ATA's wide-field survey capabilities. ATATS explores the
challenges of multi-epoch transient and variable source surveys in the domain
of dynamic range limits and changing (u,v) coverage.
Here we present images made using data from the individual epochs, as well as
a revised image combining data from all ATATS epochs. The combined image has
RMS noise 3.96 mJy / beam, with a circular beam of 150 arcsec FWHM. The
catalog, generated using a false detection rate algorithm, contains 4984
sources, and is >90% complete to 37.9 mJy. The catalogs generated from snapshot
images of the individual epochs contain between 1170 and 2019 sources over the
564 sq. deg. area in common to all epochs. The 90% completeness limits of the
single epoch catalogs range from 98.6 to 232 mJy.
We compare the catalog generated from the combined image to those from
individual epochs, and from the NRAO VLA Sky Survey (NVSS), a legacy survey at
the same frequency. We are able to place new constraints on the transient
population: fewer than 6e-4 transients / sq. deg., for transients brighter than
350 mJy with characteristic timescales of minutes to days. This strongly rules
out an astronomical origin for the ~1 Jy sources reported by Matsumura et al.
(2009), based on their stated rate of 3.1e-3 / sq. deg.Comment: 28 pages, 12 figures, ApJ accepte
Colors, magnitudes and velocity dispersions in early-type galaxies: Implications for galaxy ages and metallicities
We present an analysis of the color-magnitude-velocity dispersion relation
for a sample of 39320 early-type galaxies within the Sloan Digital Sky Survey.
We demonstrate that the color-magnitude relation is entirely a consequence of
the fact that both the luminosities and colors of these galaxies are correlated
with stellar velocity dispersions. Previous studies of the color-magnitude
relation over a range of redshifts suggest that the luminosity of an early-type
galaxy is an indicator of its metallicity, whereas residuals in color from the
relation are indicators of the luminosity-weighted age of its stars. We show
that this, when combined with our finding that velocity dispersion plays a
crucial role, has a number of interesting implications. First, galaxies with
large velocity dispersions tend to be older (i.e., they scatter redward of the
color-magnitude relation). Similarly, galaxies with large dynamical mass
estimates also tend to be older. In addition, at fixed luminosity, galaxies
which are smaller, or have larger velocity dispersions, or are more massive,
tend to be older. Second, models in which galaxies with the largest velocity
dispersions are also the most metal poor are difficult to reconcile with our
data. However, at fixed velocity dispersion, galaxies have a range of ages and
metallicities: the older galaxies have smaller metallicities, and vice-versa.
Finally, a plot of velocity dispersion versus luminosity can be used as an age
indicator: lines of constant age run parallel to the correlation between
velocity dispersion and luminosity.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures. Accepted by A
Galaxy bimodality versus stellar mass and environment
We analyse a z<0.1 galaxy sample from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey focusing
on the variation of the galaxy colour bimodality with stellar mass and
projected neighbour density Sigma, and on measurements of the galaxy stellar
mass functions. The characteristic mass increases with environmental density
from about 10^10.6 Msun to 10^10.9 Msun (Kroupa IMF, H_0=70) for Sigma in the
range 0.1--10 per Mpc^2. The galaxy population naturally divides into a red and
blue sequence with the locus of the sequences in colour-mass and
colour-concentration index not varying strongly with environment. The fraction
of galaxies on the red sequence is determined in bins of 0.2 in log Sigma and
log mass (12 x 13 bins). The red fraction f_r generally increases continuously
in both Sigma and mass such that there is a unified relation: f_r =
F(Sigma,mass). Two simple functions are proposed which provide good fits to the
data. These data are compared with analogous quantities in semi-analytical
models based on the Millennium N-body simulation: the Bower et al. (2006) and
Croton et al. (2006) models that incorporate AGN feedback. Both models predict
a strong dependence of the red fraction on stellar mass and environment that is
qualitatively similar to the observations. However, a quantitative comparison
shows that the Bower et al. model is a significantly better match; this appears
to be due to the different treatment of feedback in central galaxies.Comment: 19 pages, 17 figures; accepted by MNRAS, minor change
Interferometric Detection of Linear Polarization from Sagittarius A* at 230 GHz
We measured the linear polarization of Sagittarius A* to be 7.2 +/- 0.6 % at
230 GHzusing the BIMA array with a resolution of 3.6 x 0.9 arcsec. This
confirms the previously reported detection with the JCMT 14-m antenna. Our high
resolution observations demonstrate that the polarization does not arise from
dust but from a synchrotron source associated with Sgr A*. We see no change in
the polarization position angle and only a small change in the polarization
fraction in four observations distributed over 60 days. We find a position
angle 139 +/- 4 degrees that differs substantially from what was found in
earlier JCMT observations at the same frequency. Polarized dust emission cannot
account for this discrepancy leaving variability and observational error as the
only explanations. The BIMA observations alone place an upper limit on the
magnitude of the rotation measure of 2 x 10^6 rad m^-2. These new observations
when combined with the JCMT observations at 150, 375 and 400 GHz suggest RM
=-4.3 +/- 0.1 x 10^5 rad m^-2. This RM may be caused by an external Faraday
screen. Barring a special geometry or a high number of field reversals, this RM
rules out accretion rates greater than ~ 10^-7 M_sun y^-1. This measurement is
inconsistent with high accretion rates necessary in standard advection
dominated accretion flow and Bondi-Hoyle models for Sgr A*. It argues for low
accretion rates as a major factor in the overall faintness of Sgr A*.Comment: accepted for publication in ApJ, 18 pages, 4 figure
Flaring Activity of Sgr A*: Expanding Hot Blobs
Sgr A* is considered to be a massive black hole at the Galactic center and is
known to be variable in radio, millimeter, near-IR and X-rays. Recent
multi-wavelength observing campaigns show a simultaneous X-ray and near-IR
flare, as well as sub-millimeter and near-IR flares from Sgr A*. The flare
activity is thought to be arising from the innermost region of Sgr A*. We have
recently argued that the duration of flares in near-IR and submillimeter
wavelengths implies that the burst of emission expands and cools on a dynamical
time scale before the flares leave Sgr A*. The detection of radio flares with a
time delay in the range of 20 and 40 minutes between 7 and 12mm peak emission
implies adiabatic expansion of a uniform, spherical hot blob due to flare
activity. We suspect that this simple outflow picture shows some of the
characteristics that are known to take place in microquasars, thus we may learn
much from comparative study of Sgr A* and its environment vs. microquasars.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, to be published in IV Microquasar Workshop:
Microquasars and Beyond, September 18-22 2006, Como, Ital
Near-infrared adaptive optics imaging of high redshift quasars
The properties of high redshift quasar host galaxies are studied, in order to
investigate the connection between galaxy evolution, nuclear activity, and the
formation of supermassive black holes. We combine new near-infrared
observations of three high redshift quasars (2 < z < 3), obtained at the ESO
Very Large Telescope equipped with adaptive optics, with selected data from the
literature. For the three new objects we were able to detect and characterize
the properties of the host galaxy, found to be consistent with those of massive
elliptical galaxies of M(R) ~ -24.7 for the one radio loud quasar, and M(R) ~
-23.8 for the two radio quiet quasars. When combined with existing data at
lower redshift, these new observations depict a scenario where the host
galaxies of radio loud quasars are seen to follow the expected trend of
luminous (~5L*) elliptical galaxies undergoing passive evolution. This trend is
remarkably similar to that followed by radio galaxies at z > 1.5. Radio quiet
quasars hosts also follow a similar trend but at a lower average luminosity
(~0.5 mag dimmer). The data indicate that quasar host galaxies are already
fully formed at epochs as early as ~2 Gyr after the Big Bang and then passively
fade in luminosity to the present epoch.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, 24 pages, 10 figure
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