4,310 research outputs found

    Broad Line Radio Galaxies: Jet Contribution to the nuclear X-Ray Continuum

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    It is shown that, for Broad Line Radio Galaxies the strength of the non-thermal beamed radiation, when present, is always smaller than the accretion flow by a factor < 0.7 in the 2-10 keV band. The result has been obtained using the procedure adopted for disentangling the Flat Spectrum Radio Quasar 3C 273 (Grandi & Palumbo 2004). Although this implies a significantly smaller non-thermal flux in Radio Galaxies when compared to Blazars, the jet component, if present, could be important at very high energies and thus easily detectable with GLAST.Comment: 12 pages including 2 figures (4 files), ApJ accepte

    Jets and outflows in Radio Galaxies: implications for AGN feedback

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    One of the main debated astrophysical problems is the role of the AGN feedback in galaxy formation. It is known that massive black holes have a profound effect on the formation and evolution of galaxies, but how black holes and galaxies communicate is still an unsolved problem. For Radio Galaxies, feedback studies have mainly focused on jet/cavity systems in the most massive and X-ray luminous galaxy clusters. The recent high-resolution detection of warm absorbers in some Broad Line Radio Galaxies allow us to investigate the interplay between the nuclear engine and the surrounding medium from a different perspective. We report on the detection of warm absorbers in two Broad Line Radio Galaxies, 3C 382 and 3C 390.3, and discuss the physical and energetic properties of the absorbing gas. Finally, we attempt a comparison between radio-loud and radio-quiet outflows.Comment: To be published in the proceedings of High Energy Phenomena in Relativistic Outflows III (HEPRO III, IJMPCS). 4 pages, 2 figure

    ASCA view on High-Redshift Radio-Quiet Quasars

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    We briefly discuss the latest ASCA results on the X-ray spectral properties of high-redshift radio-quiet quasars.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, 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

    A deep look at the inner regions of the mini-BAL QSO PG 1126-041 with XMM-Newton

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    A long XMM-Newton observation of the mini-BAL QSO PG 1126-041 allowed us to detect a highly ionized phase of X-ray absorbing gas outflowing at v~15000 km/s. Physical implications are briefly discussed.Comment: 2 pages, 2 figures. Proceedings of "X.ray Astronomy 2009", Bologna 09/7-11/2009, AIP Conference Series, Eds. A. Comastri, M. Cappi, L. Angelin
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