485 research outputs found
Deep ROSAT-HRI observations of the NGC 1399/NGC 1404 region: morphology and structure of the X-ray halo
We present the analysis of a deep (167 ks) ROSAT HRI observation of the cD
galaxy NGC 1399 in the Fornax cluster. Using both HRI and, at larger radii,
archival PSPC data, we find that the radial behavior of the X-ray surface
brightness profile is not consistent with a simple Beta model and suggests
instead three distinct components. We use a multi-component bidimensional model
to study in detail these three components that we identify respectively with
the cooling flow region, the galactic and the cluster halo. From these data we
derive a binding mass distribution in agreement with that suggested by optical
dynamical indicators, with an inner core dominated by luminous matter and an
extended dark halo differently distributed on galactic and cluster scales. The
HRI data and a preliminary analysis of Chandra public data, allow us to detect
significant density fluctuations in the halo. We discuss possible
non-equilibrium scenarios to explain the hot halo structure, including tidal
interactions with neighboring galaxies, ram stripping from the intra-cluster
medium and merging events. In the innermost region of NGC 1399, the comparison
between the X-ray and radio emission suggests that the radio emitting plasma is
displacing and producing shocks in the hot X-ray emitting gas. We found that
the NGC 1404 halo is well represented by a single symmetric Beta model and
follows the stellar light profile within the inner 8 kpc. The mass distribution
is similar to the `central' component of the NGC 1399 halo. At larger radii ram
pressure stripping from the intra-cluster medium produces strong asymmetries in
the gas distribution. Finally we discuss the properties of the point source
population finding evidence of correlation between the source excess and NGC
1399.Comment: 34 pages in aastex5.0 format, including 28 B&W and 4 color figures.
Uses LaTex packages: subfigure, lscape and psfig. Accepted for publication in
ApJ. High resolution version can be found at:
http://www.na.astro.it/~paolillo/publications.htm
Linking the X-ray and infrared properties of star-forming galaxies at z < 1.5
We present the most complete study to date of the X-ray emission from star formation in high-redshift (median z = 0.7; z −3 in both hard and soft X-ray bands. From the sources which are star formation dominated, only a small fraction are individually X-ray detected and for the bulk of the sample we calculate average X-ray luminosities through stacking. We find an average soft X-ray to infrared ratio of log ?L SX /L IR ? = −4.3 and an average hard X-ray to infrared ratio of log?L HX /L IR ?=−3.8.WereportthattheX-ray/IRcorrelationisapproximatelylinearthrough the entire range of L IR and z probed and, although broadly consistent with the local (z < 0.1) one, it does display some discrepancies. We suggest that these discrepancies are unlikely to be physical, i.e. due to an intrinsic change in the X-ray properties of star-forming galaxies with cosmic time, as there is no significant evidence for evolution of the L X /L IR ratio with redshift. Instead, they are possibly due to selection effects and remaining AGN contamination.
We also examine whether dust obscuration in the galaxy plays a role in attenuating X-rays from star formation, by investigating changes in the L X /L IR ratio as a function of the average dust temperature. We conclude that X-rays do not suffer any measurable attenuation in the host galaxy
SUDARE-VOICE variability-selection of Active Galaxies in the Chandra Deep Field South and the SERVS/SWIRE region
One of the most peculiar characteristics of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) is
their variability over all wavelengths. This property has been used in the past
to select AGN samples and is foreseen to be one of the detection techniques
applied in future multi-epoch surveys, complementing photometric and
spectroscopic methods.
In this paper, we aim to construct and characterise an AGN sample using a
multi-epoch dataset in the r band from the SUDARE-VOICE survey.
Our work makes use of the VST monitoring program of an area surrounding the
Chandra Deep Field South to select variable sources. We use data spanning a six
month period over an area of 2 square degrees, to identify AGN based on their
photometric variability.
The selected sample includes 175 AGN candidates with magnitude r < 23 mag. We
distinguish different classes of variable sources through their lightcurves, as
well as X-ray, spectroscopic, SED, optical and IR information overlapping with
our survey.
We find that 12% of the sample (21/175) is represented by SN. Of the
remaining sources, 4% (6/154) are stars, while 66% (102/154) are likely AGNs
based on the available diagnostics. We estimate an upper limit to the
contamination of the variability selected AGN sample of about 34%, but we point
out that restricting the analysis to the sources with available
multi-wavelength ancillary information, the purity of our sample is close to
80% (102 AGN out of 128 non-SN sources with multi-wavelength diagnostics). Our
work thus confirms the efficiency of the variability selection method in
agreement with our previous work on the COSMOS field; in addition we show that
the variability approach is roughly consistent with the infrared selection.Comment: Published in A & A, 15 pages, 6 figure
A Variable Black Hole X-Ray Source in a NGC 1399 Globular Cluster
We have discovered an accreting black hole (BH) in a spectroscopically
confirmed globular cluster (GC) in NGC 1399 through monitoring of its X-ray
activity. The source, with a peak luminosity of L_x=2x10^39 ergs/s, reveals an
order of magnitude change in the count rate within ~10 ks in a Chandra
observation. The BH resides in a metal-rich [Fe/H]~0.2 globular cluster. After
RZ2109 in NGC 4472 this is only the second black-hole X-ray source in a GC
confirmed via rapid X-ray variability. Unlike RZ2109, the X-ray spectrum of
this BH source did not change during the period of rapid variability. In
addition to the short-term variability the source also exhibits long-term
variability. After being bright for at least a decade since 1993 within a span
of 2 years it became progressively fainter, and eventually undetectable, or
marginally detectable, in deep Chandra and XMM observations. The source also
became harder as it faded. The characteristics of the long term variability in
itself provide sufficient evidence to identify the source as a BH. The long
term decline in the luminosity of this object was likely not recognized in
previous studies because the rapid variability within the bright epoch
suppressed the average luminosity in that integration. The hardening of the
spectrum accompanying the fading would also make this black hole source
indistinguishable from an accreting neutron star in some epochs. Therefore some
low mass X-ray binaries identified as NS accretors in snapshot studies of
nearby galaxies may also be BHs. Thus the discovery of the second confirmed BH
in an extragalactic GC through rapid variability at the very least suggests
that accreting BHs in GCs are not exceedingly rare occurences.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figs. Accepted for publication in Ap
The VOICE Survey : VST Optical Imaging of the CDFS and ES1 Fields
Indexación: Scopus.We present the VST Optical Imaging of the CDFS and ES1 Fields (VOICE) Survey, a VST INAF Guaranteed Time program designed to provide optical coverage of two 4 deg2 cosmic windows in the Southern hemisphere. VOICE provides the first, multi-band deep optical imaging of these sky regions, thus complementing and enhancing the rich legacy of longer-wavelength surveys with VISTA, Spitzer, Herschel and ATCA available in these areas and paving the way for upcoming observations with facilities such as the LSST, MeerKAT and the SKA. VOICE exploits VST's OmegaCAM optical imaging capabilities and completes the reduction of WFI data available within the ES1 fields as part of the ESO-Spitzer Imaging Extragalactic Survey (ESIS) program providing ugri and uBVR coverage of 4 and 4 deg2 areas within the CDFS and ES1 field respectively. We present the survey's science rationale and observing strategy, the data reduction and multi-wavelength data fusion pipeline. Survey data products and their future updates will be released at http://www.mattiavaccari.net/voice/ and on CDS/VizieR.https://pos.sissa.it/275/026/pd
Optically variable active galactic nuclei in the 3 yr VST survey of the COSMOS field
The analysis of the variability of active galactic nuclei (AGNs) at different
wavelengths and the study of possible correlations among different spectral
windows are nowadays a major field of inquiry. Optical variability has been
largely used to identify AGNs in multivisit surveys. The strength of a
selection based on optical variability lies in the chance to analyze data from
surveys of large sky areas by ground-based telescopes. However the
effectiveness of optical variability selection, with respect to other
multiwavelength techniques, has been poorly studied down to the depth expected
from next generation surveys. Here we present the results of our r-band
analysis of a sample of 299 optically variable AGN candidates in the VST survey
of the COSMOS field, counting 54 visits spread over three observing seasons
spanning > 3 yr. This dataset is > 3 times larger in size than the one
presented in our previous analysis (De Cicco et al. 2015), and the observing
baseline is ~8 times longer. We push towards deeper magnitudes (r(AB) ~23.5
mag) compared to past studies; we make wide use of ancillary multiwavelength
catalogs in order to confirm the nature of our AGN candidates, and constrain
the accuracy of the method based on spectroscopic and photometric diagnostics.
We also perform tests aimed at assessing the relevance of dense sampling in
view of future wide-field surveys. We demonstrate that the method allows the
selection of high-purity (> 86%) samples. We take advantage of the longer
observing baseline to achieve great improvement in the completeness of our
sample with respect to X-ray and spectroscopically confirmed samples of AGNs
(59%, vs. ~15% in our previous work), as well as in the completeness of
unobscured and obscured AGNs. The effectiveness of the method confirms the
importance to develop future, more refined techniques for the automated
analysis of larger datasets.Comment: 21 pages, 10 figures; accepted for publication in A&
Supernova rates from the SUDARE VST-Omegacam search II. Rates in a galaxy sample
This is the second paper of a series in which we present measurements of the
Supernova (SN) rates from the SUDARE survey. In this paper, we study the trend
of the SN rates with the intrinsic colours, the star formation activity and the
mass of the parent galaxies. We have considered a sample of about 130000
galaxies and a SN sample of about 50 events. We found that the SN Ia rate per
unit mass is higher by a factor of six in the star-forming galaxies with
respect to the passive galaxies. The SN Ia rate per unit mass is also higher in
the less massive galaxies that are also younger. These results suggest a
distribution of the delay times (DTD) less populated at long delay times than
at short delays. The CC SN rate per unit mass is proportional to both the sSFR
and the galaxy mass. The trends of the Type Ia and CC SN rates as a function of
the sSFR and the galaxy mass that we observed from SUDARE data are in agreement
with literature results at different redshifts. The expected number of SNe Ia
is in agreement with the observed one for all four DTD models considered both
in passive and star-forming galaxies so we can not discriminate between
different progenitor scenarios. The expected number of CC SNe is higher than
the observed one, suggesting a higher limit for the minimum progenitor mass. We
also compare the expected and observed trends of the SN Ia rate with the
intrinsic U - J colour of the parent galaxy, assumed as a tracer of the age
distribution. While the slope of the relation between the SN Ia rate and the U
- J color in star-forming galaxies can be reproduced well by all four DTD
models considered, only the steepest of them is able to account for the rates
and colour in star-forming and passive galaxies with the same value of the SN
Ia production efficiency.Comment: A& A accepte
The long-term X-ray variability properties of AGN in the Lockman Hole region
We present the results from a detailed X-ray variability analysis of 66 AGN
in the Lockman Hole, which have optical spectroscopic identifications. We
compare, quantitatively, their variability properties with the properties of
local AGN, and we study the "variability-luminosity" relation as a function of
redshift, and the "variability-redshift" relation in two luminosity bins. We
use archival data from the last 10 XMM observations of the Lockman Hole field
to extract light curves in the rest frame, 2-10 keV band. We use the
"normalized excess variance" to quantify the variability amplitude. Using the
latest results regarding the AGN power spectral shape and its dependence on
black hole mass and accretion rate, we are able to compute model
"variability-luminosity" curves, which we compare with the relations we
observe. When we consider all the sources in our sample, we find that their
variability amplitude decreases with increasing redshift and luminosity. These
global anti-correlations are less pronounced when we split the objects in
various luminosity and redshift bins. We do not find a significant correlation
between variability amplitude and spectral slope. The "variability-luminosity"
relation that we detect has a larger amplitude when compared to that of local
AGN. We also find that, at a given luminosity, the variability amplitude
increases with redshift up to z~1, and then stays roughly constant. Our results
imply that the AGN X-ray mechanism operates in the same way at all redshifts.
Among objects with the same luminosity in our sample, the black hole mass
decreases and the accretion rate increases with larger redshift.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Constraints on Decaying Dark Matter from Fermi Observations of Nearby Galaxies and Clusters
We analyze the impact of Fermi gamma-ray observations (primarily
non-detections) of selected nearby galaxies, including dwarf spheroidals, and
of clusters of galaxies on decaying dark matter models. We show that the fact
that galaxy clusters do not shine in gamma rays puts the most stringent limits
available to-date on the lifetime of dark matter particles for a wide range of
particle masses and decay final states. In particular, our results put strong
constraints on the possibility of ascribing to decaying dark matter both the
increasing positron fraction reported by PAMELA and the high-energy feature in
the electron-positron spectrum measured by Fermi. Observations of nearby dwarf
galaxies and of the Andromeda Galaxy (M31) do not provide as strong limits as
those from galaxy clusters, while still improving on previous constraints in
some cases.Comment: 27 pages, 5 figures, submitted to JCAP, revised version with some
additions and correction
African Americans respond to stigmatization: the meanings and salience of confronting, deflecting conflict, educating the ignorant and ‘managing the self’
Drawing on interviews with 150 randomly sampled African Americans, we analyse how members of a stigmatized group understand their experience of stigmatization and assess appropriate responses when asked about the best approach to deal with stigmatization and about responses to specific incidents. Combining in-depth interviews with a systematic coding of the data, we make original contributions to the previous literature by identifying the relative salience of modalities and tools for responding. We also examine closely through qualitative data the two most salient modalities of response, ‘confronting’ and ‘deflating’ conflict, the most salient tools, teaching out-group members about African Americans, and ‘the management of the self’, a rationale for deflating conflict that is largely overlooked in previous studies. We find that ‘confronting’ is the more popular modality for responding to stigmatization among African Americans.African and African American StudiesSociolog
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