1,569 research outputs found

    Getaway Special competition: Overview

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    Recommendations submitted for experiments to be conducted onboard the space shuttle are presented. Short biographies of the finalists in the Get Away Special (GAS) competition were included

    Evolution of Broad-line Emission from Active Galactic Nuclei

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    Apart from viewing-dependent obscuration, intrinsic broad-line emission from active galactic nuclei (AGNs) follows an evolutionary sequence: Type 11.2/1.51.8/1.921 \to 1.2/1.5 \to 1.8/1.9 \to 2 as the accretion rate onto the central black hole is decreasing. This spectral evolution is controlled, at least in part, by the parameter Lbol/M2/3L_{\rm bol}/M^{2/3}, where LbolL_{\rm bol} is the AGN bolometric luminosity and MM is the black hole mass. Both this dependence and the double-peaked profiles that emerge along the sequence arise naturally in the disk-wind scenario for the AGN broad-line region.Comment: MNRAS, to be publishe

    The barriers preventing effective treatment of South African patients with mental health problems

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    Background: Consumer research was last conducted among South African patients with mental health problems in 1997/8 by GAMAIN (The Global Alliance of Mental Health and Advocacy Networks). Respondents at the time suffered primarily from anxiety and/or unipolar depression.1 Updated consumer research was conducted between February 2004 and April 2005 by Linda Trump of Cat Communications to find out how mental health patients were faring in the current South African environment and to determine which factors were mitigating most against their recovery. The study was funded by Cat Communications and partial grants from AstraZeneca, Eli Lilly and Solvay Pharma. Method: The survey questionnaire was developed by Linda Trump and checked by Charmaine Hugo of the Mental Health Information Centre (MHIC), Dr. Colinda Linde of SADAG, and Dr. Eugene Allers of the SA Society of Psychiatrists. It was distributed and posted with a self-addressed envelope and freepost address to leaders and members of SADAG, the SA Bipolar Association, Central Gauteng Mental Health, the Schizophrenic & Bipolar Disorder Alliance (SABDA) and the OCD Association. The questionnaire was also e-mailed to the Schizophrenia Foundation, some members of SADAG and members of the Johannesburg Bipolar Support Group. In addition, it was hosted on the Health 24 and SA Bipolar Association websites. Results: The sample comprised 331 respondents. 75% had a single diagnosis, with 25% having dual or multiple diagnoses. Diagnoses included unipolar depression (30%), bipolar mood disorder (40%) and schizophrenia / schizoaffective disorder (13%). 49% of respondents suffered from one or more types of anxiety. The median age of symptom onset for respondents was 26.5, with the median respondent waiting two years before seeking help. 69% of the cohort experienced a comorbid physical ailment, entailing chronic pain. 72% of the respondents saw two or more caregivers before receiving a correct diagnosis and it took more than a year for 55% of respondents to get a correct diagnosis. 74% of respondents received the correct diagnosis from a psychiatrist, with GPs, psychologists and social workers playing a minimal role in confirming diagnoses. 68% of respondents discontinued medication at some stage of their illness and only 46% of respondents ended psychotherapy because it had served its purpose. 40% of respondents did not know what type of psychotherapy they had. Only 20% of respondents could work adequately while ill and 19% of respondents became unemployed during the course of their illness. 26% (of 304 respondents) eventually separated or divorced as a direct result of their illness. Conclusions: Ongoing education is needed to inform the public about the hazards of delaying treatment for psychiatric symptoms. Doctors need to be more forthcoming about potential side-effects and how to manage them. GPs, psychologists and social workers may need additional psychiatric education. Psychologists need to tell patients what methodology they are using and they need to be more upfront in setting objectives and discussing the desired outcomes of therapy. Ideally, psychotherapy should include the patient's partner or family when there are significant domestic tensions. Stigma needs to be reduced in the workplace. South African Psychiatry Review Vol. 9(4) 2006: 249-26

    Spectropolarimetric Evidence for Radiatively Inefficient Accretion in an Optically Dull Active Galaxy

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    We present Subaru/FOCAS spectropolarimetry of two active galaxies in the Cosmic Evolution Survey. These objects were selected to be optically dull, with the bright X-ray emission of an AGN but missing optical emission lines in our previous spectroscopy. Our new observations show that one target has very weak emission lines consistent with an optically dull AGN, while the other object has strong emission lines typical of a host-diluted Type 2 Seyfert galaxy. In neither source do we observe polarized emission lines, with 3-sigma upper limits of P_BLR < 2%. This means that the missing broad emission lines (and weaker narrow emission lines) are not due to simple anisotropic obscuration, e.g., by the canonical AGN torus. The weak-lined optically dull AGN exhibits a blue polarized continuum with P = 0.78 +/- 0.07% at 4400 A < lambda_rest < 7200 A (P = 1.37 +/- 0.16% at 4400 A < lambda_rest < 5050 A). The wavelength dependence of this polarized flux is similar to that of an unobscured AGN continuum and represents the intrinsic AGN emission, either as synchrotron emission or the outer part of an accretion disk reflected by a clumpy dust scatterer. Because this intrinsic AGN emission lacks emission lines, this source is likely to have a radiatively inefficient accretion flow.Comment: Accepted to ApJ. 6 pages, 2 figure

    From Starburst to Quiescence: Testing AGN feedback in Rapidly Quenching Post-Starburst Galaxies

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    Post-starbursts are galaxies in transition from the blue cloud to the red sequence. Although they are rare today, integrated over time they may be an important pathway to the red sequence. This work uses SDSS, GALEX, and WISE observations to identify the evolutionary sequence from starbursts to fully quenched post-starbursts in the narrow mass range logM(M)=10.310.7\log M(M_\odot) = 10.3-10.7, and identifies "transiting" post-starbursts which are intermediate between these two populations. In this mass range, 0.3%\sim 0.3\% of galaxies are starbursts, 0.1%\sim 0.1\% are quenched post-starbursts, and 0.5%\sim 0.5\% are the transiting types in between. The transiting post-starbursts have stellar properties that are predicted for fast-quenching starbursts and morphological characteristics that are already typical of early-type galaxies. The AGN fraction, as estimated from optical line ratios, of these post-starbursts is about 3 times higher (36±8%\gtrsim 36 \pm 8 \%) than that of normal star-forming galaxies of the same mass, but there is a significant delay between the starburst phase and the peak of nuclear optical AGN activity (median age difference of 200±100\gtrsim 200 \pm 100 Myr), in agreement with previous studies. The time delay is inferred by comparing the broad-band near NUV-to-optical photometry with stellar population synthesis models. We also find that starbursts and post-starbursts are significantly more dust-obscured than normal star-forming galaxies in the same mass range. About 20%20\% of the starbursts and 15%15\% of the transiting post-starbursts can be classified as the "Dust-Obscured Galaxies" (DOGs), while only 0.8%0.8\% of normal galaxies are DOGs.The time delay between the starburst phase and AGN activity suggests that AGN do not play a primary role in the original quenching of starbursts but may be responsible for quenching later low-level star formation during the post-starburst phase.Comment: 30 pages, 18 figures,accepted to Ap

    C IV BAL disappearance in a large SDSS QSO sample

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    Broad absorption lines (BALs) in the spectra of quasi-stellar objects (QSOs) originate from outflowing winds along our line of sight; winds are thought to originate from the inner regions of the QSO accretion disk, close to the central supermassive black hole (SMBH). Winds likely play a role in galaxy evolution and aid the accretion mechanism onto the SMBH. BAL equivalent widths can change on typical timescales from months to years; such variability is generally attributed to changes in the covering factor and/or in the ionization level of the gas. We investigate BAL variability, focusing on BAL disappearance. We analyze multi-epoch spectra of more than 1500 QSOs -the largest sample ever used for such a study- observed by different programs from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey-I/II/III (SDSS), and search for disappearing C IV BALs. The spectra rest-frame time baseline ranges from 0.28 to 4.9 yr; the source redshifts range from 1.68 to 4.27. We detect 73 disappearing BALs in the spectra of 67 sources. This corresponds to 3.9% of disappearing BALs, and 5.1% of our BAL QSOs exhibit at least one disappearing BAL. We estimate the average lifetime of a BAL along our line of sight (~ 80-100 yr), which appears consistent with the accretion disk orbital time at distances where winds are thought to originate. We inspect properties of the disappearing BALs and compare them to the properties of our main sample. We also investigate the existence of a correlation in the variability of multiple troughs in the same spectrum, and find it persistent at large velocity offsets between BAL pairs, suggesting that a mechanism extending on a global scale is necessary to explain the phenomenon. We select a more reliable sample of disappearing BALs following Filiz Ak et al. (2012), where a subset of our sample was analyzed, and compare the findings from the two works, obtaining generally consistent results.Comment: 22 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in A&

    The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping Project: Post-Starburst Signatures in Quasar Host Galaxies at z < 1

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    Quasar host galaxies are key for understanding the relation between galaxies and the supermassive black holes (SMBHs) at their centers. We present a study of 191 broad-line quasars and their host galaxies at z < 1, using high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) spectra produced by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping project. Clear detection of stellar absorption lines allows a reliable decomposition of the observed spectra into nuclear and host components, using spectral models of quasar and stellar radiations as well as emission lines from the interstellar medium. We estimate age, mass (M*), and velocity dispersion (sigma*) of the host stars, the star formation rate (SFR), quasar luminosity, and SMBH mass (Mbh), for each object. The quasars are preferentially hosted by massive galaxies with M* ~ 10^{11} Msun characterized by stellar ages around a billion years, which coincides with the transition phase of normal galaxies from the blue cloud to the red sequence. The host galaxies have relatively low SFRs and fall below the main sequence of star-forming galaxies at similar redshifts. These facts suggest that the hosts have experienced an episode of major star formation sometime in the past billion years, which was subsequently quenched or suppressed. The derived Mbh - sigma* and Mbh - M* relations agree with our past measurements and are consistent with no evolution from the local Universe. The present analysis demonstrates that reliable measurements of stellar properties of quasar host galaxies are possible with high-SNR fiber spectra, which will be acquired in large numbers with future powerful instruments such as the Subaru Prime Focus Spectrograph.Comment: ApJ in pres
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