488 research outputs found

    On the AGN radio luminosity distribution and the black hole fundamental plane

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    We have studied the dependence of the AGN nuclear radio (1.4 GHz) luminosity on both the AGN 2-10 keV X-ray and the host-galaxy K-band luminosity. A complete sample of 1268 X-ray selected AGN (both type 1 and type 2) has been used, which is the largest catalogue of AGN belonging to statistically well defined samples where radio, X and K band information exists. At variance with previous studies, radio upper limits have been statistically taken into account using a Bayesian Maximum Likelihood fitting method. It resulted that a good fit is obtained assuming a plane in the 3D L_R-L_X-L_K space, namely logL_R= xi_X logL_X + xi_K logL_K + xi_0, having a ~1 dex wide (1 sigma) spread in radio luminosity. As already shown, no evidence of bimodality in the radio luminosity distribution was found and therefore any definition of radio loudness in AGN is arbitrary. Using scaling relations between the BH mass and the host galaxy K-band luminosity, we have also derived a new estimate of the BH fundamental plane (in the L_5GHz -L_X-M_BH space). Our analysis shows that previous measures of the BH fundamental plane are biased by ~0.8 dex in favor of the most luminous radio sources. Therefore, many AGN studies, where the BH fundamental plane is used to investigate how AGN regulate their radiative and mechanical luminosity as a function of the accretion rate, or many AGN/galaxy co-evolution models, where radio-feedback is computed using the AGN fundamental plane, should revise their conclusions.Comment: Submitted to MNRAS. Revised version after minor referee comments. 12 pages, 12 figure

    The BeppoSAX High Energy Large Area Survey (HELLAS) - VI. The radio properties

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    We present results of a complete radio follow-up obtained with the VLA and ATCA radio telescopes down to a 6 cm flux limit of about 0.3 mJy of all the 147 X-ray sources detected in the BeppoSAX HELLAS survey. We found 53 X-ray/radio likely associations, corresponding to about one third of the X-ray sample. Using the two point spectral index alpha_ro=0.35 we divided all the HELLAS X-ray sources in radio quiet and radio loud. We have 26 sources classified as radio-loud objects, corresponding to about 18% of the HELLAS sample. In agreement with previous results, the identified radio-loud sources are associated mainly with Type 1 AGNs with L(5-10 keV) > 10^44 erg/s, while all the identified Type 2 AGNs and Emission Line Galaxies are radio quiet objects with L(5-10 keV) < 10^44 erg/s. The analysis of the radio spectral index suggests that Type 1 AGNs have a mean radio spectral index flatter than Type 2 AGNs and Emission Line Galaxies.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, MNRAS, accepte

    Valutazione dell’accessibilità con software open source

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    L'accessibilità ha da sempre ricoperto un ruolo fondamentale per lo sviluppo delle società e per rendere sempre più agevoli gli spostamenti, a prescindere dalle cause che li originano. In questo articolo si vuole focalizzare l’attenzione sull’accessibilità ai terminal aeroportuali, in quanto la velocità e la facilità di accesso sono aspetti strategici per il trasporto aereo. Se il tempo di accesso ai terminal non fosse sufficientemente rapido, negli spostamenti a breve distanza, l’aereo perderebbe il vantaggio che ha sulle altre scelte modali. Lo scopo che ci si è posti nella ricerca è di valutare l’accessibilità territoriale attraverso l’uso di software GIS (Geographic Information System) open source. Per validare il metodo si è condotta un’applicazione sulle infrastrutture aeroportuali siciliane. A tal fine è stato preliminarmente necessario analizzare la rete stradale siciliana, per creare un quadro generale che ha permesso di mettere in evidenza il grado di accessibilità che caratterizza i tre principali aeroporti dell’isola: · Falcone Borsellino di Palermo-Punta Raisi, · Vincenzo Bellini di Catania-Fontanarossa, · Vincenzo Florio di Trapani-Birgi. Lo studio si è concentrato sulle misure topologiche dell’accessibilità, che esprimono la raggiungibilità di un sito in funzione delle connessioni offerte dal sistema di trasporti. È stata, quindi, considerata l’accessibilità passiva a partire da tutti i comuni siciliani verso i terminal aeroportuali in termini di tempo. Tale misura può essere rappresentata da curve isocrone, che permettono di determinare il numero di destinazioni potenziali che possono essere raggiunte in un prefissato intervallo di tempo di viaggio. Questa misura non tiene conto della percezione degli individui e delle loro preferenze; ciò implica che tutte le opportunità sono egualmente desiderabili con riferimento al tempo di viaggio o al tipo di opportunità. Le isocrone sono state tracciate per testare il potenziale della rete stradale a vuoto e sotto l’ipotesi semplificativa che l’offerta dei tre aeroporti, in termini di voli disponibili, sia uguale

    Tools for computing the AGN feedback: radio-loudness distribution and the kinetic luminosity function

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    We studied the Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) radio emission from a compilation of hard X-ray selected samples, all observed in the 1.4 GHz band. A total of more than 1600 AGN with 2-10 keV de-absorbed luminosities higher than 10^42 erg/s were used. For a sub-sample of about 50 z\lsim 0.1 AGN it was possible to reach a ~80% fraction of radio detections and therefore, for the first time, it was possible to almost completely measure the probability distribution function of the ratio between the radio and the X-ray luminosity Rx=log[L(1.4)/Lx]. The probability distribution function of Rx was functionally fitted as dependent on the X-ray luminosity and redshift, P(Rx|Lx,z). It roughly spans over 6 decades (-7<Rx<-1), and does not show any sign of bi-modality. It resulted that the probability of finding large values of the Rx ratio increases with decreasing X-ray luminosities and (possibly) with increasing redshift. No statistical significant difference was found between the radio properties of the X-ray absorbed and unabsorbed AGN. The measure of the probability distribution function of Rx allowed us to compute the kinetic luminosity function and the kinetic energy density which, at variance with what assumed in many galaxy evolution models, is observed to decrease of about a factor of five at redshift below 0.5. About half of the kinetic energy density results to be produced by the more radio quiet (Rx<-4) AGN. In agreement with previous estimates, the AGN efficiency in converting the accreted mass energy into kinetic power is, on average, ~5x10-3.Comment: 13 pages, ApJsty; ApJ in pres

    The contribution of faint AGN to the hard X-ray background

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    Hard X-ray selection is the most efficient way to discriminate between accretion-powered sources, such as AGN, from sources dominated by starlight. Hard X-rays are also less affected than other bands by obscuration. We have then carried out the BeppoSAX High Energy Large Area Survey (HELLAS) in the largely unexplored 5-10 keV band, finding 180 sources in ~50 deg^2 of sky with flux >5E-14 erg cm-2 s-1. After correction for the non uniform sky coverage this corresponds to resolving about 30 % of the hard Cosmic X-ray Background (XRB). Here we report on a first optical spectroscopic identification campaign, finding 12 AGN out of 14 X-ray error-boxes studied. Seven AGN show evidence for obscuration in X-ray and optical bands, a fraction higher than in previous ROSAT or ASCA-ROSAT surveys (at a 95-99 % and 90 % confidence level respectively), thus supporting the scenario in which a significant fraction of the XRB is made by obscured AGN.Comment: MNRAS, revised version after minor referee comment

    AGN counts at 15um. XMM observations of the ELAIS-S1-5 sample

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    Context: The counts of galaxies and AGN in the mid infra-red (MIR) bands are important instruments for studying their cosmological evolution. However, the classic spectral line ratios techniques can become misleading when trying to properly separate AGN from starbursts or even from apparently normal galaxies. Aims: We use X-ray band observations to discriminate AGN activity in previously classified MIR-selected starburst galaxies and to derive updated AGN1 and (Compton thin) AGN2 counts at 15 um. Methods: XMM observations of the ELAIS-S1 15um sample down to flux limits ~2x10^-15 erg cm^-2 s^-1 (2-10 keV band) were used. We classified as AGN all those MIR sources with a unabsorbed 2-10 keV X-ray luminosity higher that ~10^42 erg/s. Results: We find that at least about 13(+/-6) per cent of the previously classified starburst galaxies harbor an AGN. According to these figures, we provide an updated estimate of the counts of AGN1 and (Compton thin) AGN2 at 15 um. It turns out that at least 24% of the extragalactic sources brighter than 0.6 my at 15 um are AGN (~13% contribution to the extragalactic background produced at fluxes brighter than 0.6 mJy).Comment: Accepted for publication on A&

    The BeppoSAX HELLAS survey: on the nature of faint hard X-ray selected sources

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    The BeppoSAX 4.5-10 keV High Energy Large Area Survey has covered about 80 square degrees of sky down to a flux of F(5-10keV)~5E-14 cgs. Optical spectroscopic identification of about half of the sources in the sample (62) shows that many (~50%) are highly obscured AGN, in line with the predictions of AGN synthesis models for the hard X-ray background (XRB, see e.g. Comastri et al. 1995). The X-ray data, complemented by optical, near-IR and radio follow-up, indicate that the majority of these AGN are ``intermediate'' objects, i.e. type 1.8-1.9 AGN,`red' quasars, and even a few broad line, blue continuum quasars, obscured in X-rays by columns of the order of logNH=22.5-23.5 cm-2, but showing a wide dispersion in optical extinction. The optical and near-IR photometry of the obscured objects are dominated by galaxy starlight, indicating that a sizeable fraction of the accretion power in the Universe may actually have been missed in optical color surveys. This also implies that multicolor photometry techniques may be efficiently used to assess the redshift of the hard X-ray selected sources.Comment: 9 pages, Invited talk to appear in the Proceedings of the Conference X-ray Astronomy '999: Stellar Endpoints, AGNs and the Diffuse X-ray Background. (September 6-10 - 1999

    Dust in active nuclei. I. Evidence for "anomalous" properties

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    We present observational evidences that dust in the circumnuclear region of AGNs has different properties than in the Galactic diffuse interstellar medium. By comparing the reddening of optical and infrared broad lines and the X-ray absorbing column density we find that the E(B-V)/N_H ratio is nearly always lower than Galactic by a factor ranging from ~3 up to ~100. Other observational results indicate that the Av/N_H ratio is significantly lower than Galactic in various classes of AGNs including intermediate type 1.8-1.9 Seyferts, hard X-ray selected and radio selected quasars, broad absorption line QSOs and grism selected QSOs. The lack of prominent absorption features at 9.7um (silicates) and at 2175A (carbon dip) in the spectra of Seyfert 2s and of reddened Seyfert 1s, respectively, add further evidence for dust in the circumnuclear region of AGNs being different from Galactic. These observational results indicate that the dust composition in the circumnuclear region of AGNs could be dominated by large grains, which make the extinction curve flatter, featureless and are responsible for the reduction of the E(B-V)/N_H and Av/N_H ratios. Regardless of the physical origin of these phenomena, the reduced dust absorption with respect to what expected from the gaseous column density should warn about a mismatch between the optical and the X-ray classification of the active galactic nuclei in terms of their obscuration.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in A&
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