1,446 research outputs found

    The Asiago-ESO/RASS QSO Survey II. The Southern Sample

    Full text link
    This is the second paper of a series describing the Asiago-ESO/RASS QSO survey, a project aimed at the construction of an all-sky statistically well-defined sample of very bright QSOs (B_J < 15). Such a survey is required to remove the present uncertainties about the properties of the local QSO population and constitutes an homogeneous database for detailed evolutionary studies of AGN. We present here the complete Southern Sample, which comprises 243 bright (12.60 < B_J < 15.13) QSO candidates at high galactic latitudes (|b_{gal}| > 30^{\circ}). The area covered by the survey is 5660 sq. deg. Spectroscopy for the 137 still unidentified objects has been obtained. The total number of AGN turns out to be 111, 63 of which are new identifications. The properties of the selection are discussed. The completeness and the success rate for this survey at the final stage are 63% and 46%, respectively.Comment: 36 pages Latex, with 15 PostScript figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomical Journa

    The dusty environment of Quasars. Far-IR properties of Optical Quasars

    Get PDF
    We present the ISO far-IR photometry of a complete sub-sample of optically selected bright quasars belonging to two complete surveys selected through multicolour (U,B,V,R,I) techniques. The ISOPHOT camera on board of the ISO Satellite was used to target these quasars at wavelengths of 7.3, 11.5, 60, 100 and 160 micron. Almost two thirds of the objects were detected at least in one ISOPHOT band. The detection rate is independent of the source redshift, very likely due to the negative K-correction of the far-IR thermal emission. More than a half of the optically selected QSOs show significant emission between 4 and 100 micron in the quasar rest-frame. These fluxes have a very likely thermal origin, although in a few objects an additional contribution from a non-thermal component is plausible in the long wavelength bands. In a colour-colour diagram these objects span a wide range of properties from AGN-dominated to ULIRG-like. The far-IR composite spectrum of the quasar population presents a broad far-IR bump between 10 and 30 micron and a sharp drop at wavelengths greater than 100 micron in the quasar restframe. The amount of energy emitted in the far-IR, is on average a few times larger than that emitted in the blue and the ratio L(FIR)/L(B) increases with the bolometric luminosity. Objects with fainter blue magnitudes have larger ratios between the far-IR (wavelengths > 60 micron) fluxes and the blue band flux, which is attributed to extinction by dust around the central source. No relation between the blue absolute magnitude and the dust colour temperature is seen, suggesting that the dominant source of FIR energy could be linked to a concurrent starburst rather than to gravitational energy produced by the central engine.Comment: Astronomical Journal, in pres

    High resolution spectroscopy of the three dimensional cosmic web with close QSO groups

    Get PDF
    We study the three-dimensional distribution of matter at z~2 using high resolution spectra of QSO pairs and simulated spectra drawn from cosmological hydro-dynamical simulations. We present a sample of 15 QSOs, corresponding to 21 baselines of angular separations evenly distributed between ~1 and 14 arcmin, observed with the Ultraviolet and Visual Echelle Spectrograph (UVES) at the European Southern Observatory-Very Large Telescope (ESO-VLT). The observed correlation functions of the transmitted flux in the HI Lya forest transverse to and along the line of sight are in agreement, implying that the distortions in redshift space due to peculiar velocities are relatively small and - within the relatively large error bars - not significant. The clustering signal is significant up to velocity separations of ~300 km/s, corresponding to about 5 h^{-1} comoving Mpc. Compatibility at the 2 sigma level has been found both for the Auto- and Cross-correlation functions and for the set of the Cross correlation coefficients. The analysis focuses in particular on two QSO groups of the sample. Searching for alignments in the redshift space between Lya absorption lines belonging to different lines of sight, it has been possible to discover the presence of a wide HI structures extending over about ten Mpc in comoving space, and give constraints on the sizes of two cosmic under-dense regions in the intergalactic medium.Comment: Accepted by MNRAS, version matching the published on

    Nonlinear effects for Bose Einstein condensates in optical lattices

    Full text link
    We present our experimental investigations on the subject of dynamical nonlinearity-induced instabilities and of nonlinear Landau-Zener tunneling between two energy bands in a Rubidium Bose-Einstein condensate in an accelerated periodic potential. These two effects may be considered two different regimes (for small and large acceleration) of the same physical system and studied with the same experimental protocol. Nonlinearity introduces an asymmetry in Landau-Zener tunneling; as a result, tunneling from the ground state to the excited state is enhanced whereas in the opposite direction it is suppressed. When the acceleration is lowered, the condensate exhibits an unstable behaviour due to nonlinearity. We also carried out a full numerical simulation of both regimes integrating the full Gross-Pitaevskii equation; for the Landau-Zener effect we also used a simple two-level model. In both cases we found good agreement with the experimental results.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures. Submitted to Laser Physic

    Testing Cosmological Models With A \lya Forest Statistic: The High End Of The Optical Depth Distribution

    Full text link
    We pay particular attention to the high end of the \lya optical depth distribution of a quasar spectrum. Based on the flux distribution (Miralda-Escud\'e et al 1996), a simple yet seemingly cosmological model -differentiating statistic, Δτ0\Delta_{\tau_0} -- the cumulative probability of a quasar spectrum with \lya optical depth greater than a high value τ0\tau_0 -- is emphasized. It is shown that two different models -- the cold dark matter model with a cosmological constant and the mixed hot and cold dark matter model, both normalized to COBE and local galaxy cluster abundance -- yield quite different values of Δτ0\Delta_{\tau_0}: 0.13 of the former versus 0.058 of the latter for τ0=3.0\tau_0=3.0 at z=3z=3. Moreover, it is argued that Δτ0\Delta_{\tau_0} may be fairly robust to compute theoretically because it does not seem to depend sensitively on small variations of simulations parameters such as radiation field, cooling, feedback process, radiative transfer, resolution and simulation volume within the plausible ranges of the concerned quantities. Furthermore, it is illustrated that Δτ0\Delta_{\tau_0} can be obtained sufficiently accurately from currently available observed quasar spectra for τ0∼3.0−4.0\tau_0\sim 3.0-4.0, when observational noise is properly taken into account. We anticipate that analyses of observations of quasar \lya absorption spectra over a range of redshift may be able to constrain the redshift evolution of the amplitude of the density fluctuations on small-to-intermediate scales, therefore providing an independent constraint on Ω0\Omega_0, Ω0,HDM\Omega_{0,HDM} and Λ0\Lambda_0.Comment: ApJ Letters, in press, substantial changes have been made from the last versio

    The power spectrum of the flux distribution in the Lyman-alpha forest of a Large sample of UVES QSO Absorption Spectra (LUQAS)

    Get PDF
    The flux power spectra of the Lyman-alpha forest from a sample of 27 QSOs taken with the high resolution echelle spectrograph UVES on VLT are presented. We find a similar fluctuation amplitude at the peak of the ``3D'' flux power spectrum at k ~ 0.03 (km/sec)^(-1) as the study by Croft et al. (2002), in the same redshift range. The amplitude of the flux power spectrum increases with decreasing redshift if corrected for the increase in the mean flux level as expected if the evolution of the flux power spectrum is sensitive to the gravitational growth of matter density fluctuations. This is in agreement with the findings of McDonald et al. (2000) at larger redshift. The logarithmic slope of the "3D" flux power spectrum, P_F(k), at large scales k < 0.03 (km/sec)^(-1), is 1.4 +- 0.3, i.e. 0.3 shallower than that found by Croft et al. (2002) but consistent within the errors.Comment: 18 pages, 9 PS figures, 6 tables. Note that the k-values of the 1D flux power spectrum had been erroneously shifted by half a bin size (in log k) in the previous version. All the other results are unaffected. New tables can be found at http://www.ast.cam.ac.uk/~rtnigm/luqas.ht

    Dynamics and phase evolution of Bose-Einstein condensates in one-dimensional optical lattices

    Full text link
    We report experimental results on the dynamics and phase evolution of Bose-Einstein condensates in 1D optical lattices. The dynamical behaviour is studied by adiabatically loading the condensate into the lattice and subsequently switching off the magnetic trap. In this case, the condensate is free to expand inside the periodic structure of the optical lattice. The phase evolution of the condensate, on the other hand, can be studied by non-adiabatically switching on the periodic potential. We observe decays and revivals of the interference pattern after a time-of-flight.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures; submitted to the Proceedings of the 11th Laser Physics Workshop, Bratislava 200
    • …
    corecore