36,660 research outputs found
The Origin of Radio Emission in Low-Luminosity Active Galactic Nuclei: Jets, Accretion Flows, or Both?
The low-luminosity active galactic nuclei in NGC 3147, NGC 4203, and NGC 4579
have been imaged at four frequencies with the Very Long Baseline Array. The
galaxies are unresolved at all frequencies, with size upper limits of
times the Schwarzschild radii of their central massive black holes.
The spectral indices between 1.7 and 5.0 GHz range from 0.2 to 0.4; one and
possibly two of the galaxies show spectral turnovers between 5.0 and 8.4 GHz.
The high brightness temperatures ( K) and relatively straight spectra
imply that free-free emission and/or absorption cannot account for the slightly
inverted spectra. Although the radio properties of the cores superficially
resemble predictions for advection-dominated accretion flows, the radio
luminosities are too high compared to the X-ray luminosities. We suggest that
the bulk of the radio emission is generated by a compact radio jet, which may
coexist with a low radiative efficiency accretion flow.Comment: To appear in ApJ (Letters). 4 page
Theory of High-Field Transports in Metallic Single-Wall Nanotubes
Individual metallic single-wall carbon nanotubes show unsual non-Ohmic
transport behaviors at high bias fields. For low resistance contact samples,
the differential conductance dI/dV increases with increasing bias, reaching a
maximum at 100mV. As the bias increases further, dI/dV drops
dramatically [Yao et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 84, 2941 (2000)]. The higher the
bias, the system behaves in a more normal (Ohmic) manner. This so-called
zero-bias anomaly is temperature-dependent (50--150K). We propose a new
interpretation. Supercurrent runs in the graphene wall below 150K. The
normal conduction-electron currents run outside the wall, which are subject to
the scattering by phonons and impurities. The currents along the tube induce
circulating magnetic fields and eventually destroy the supercurrent in the wall
at high enough bias, and restore the Ohmic behavior. If the prevalent ballistic
electron model is adopted, then the scattering effects cannot be discussed.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Outflow-Dominated Emission from the Quiescent Massive Black Holes in NGC 4621 and NGC 4697
The nearby elliptical galaxies NGC 4621 and NGC 4697 each host a supermassive
black hole with a mass more than 1e8 Solar masses. Analysis of archival Chandra
data and new NRAO Very Large Array data shows that each galaxy contains a
low-luminosity active galactic nucleus (LLAGN), identified as a faint, hard
X-ray source that is astrometrically coincident with a faint 8.5-GHz source.
The latter has a diameter less than 0.3 arcsec (26 pc for NGC 4621, 17 pc for
NGC 4697). The black holes energizing these LLAGNs have Eddington ratios L(2-10
keV) / L(Edd) ~ 1e-9, placing them in the so-called quiescent regime. The
emission from these quiescent black holes is radio-loud, with log Rx = log
nuLnu(8.5 GHz) / L(2-10 keV) ~ -2, suggesting the presence of a radio outflow.
Also, application of the radio-X-ray-mass relation from Yuan & Cui for
quiescent black holes predicts the observed radio luminosities nuLnu(8.5 GHz)
to within a factor of a few. Significantly, that relation invokes X-ray
emission from the outflow rather than from an accretion flow. The faint, but
detectable, emission from these two massive black holes is therefore consistent
with being outflow-dominated. Observational tests of this finding are
suggested.Comment: 11 pages; 4 figures: emulateapj; to appear in Ap
Noncommutative D-Brane in Non-Constant NS-NS B Field Background
We show that when the field strength H of the NS-NS B field does not vanish,
the coordinates X and momenta P of an open string endpoints satisfy a set of
mixed commutation relations among themselves. Identifying X and P with the
coordinates and derivatives of the D-brane world volume, we find a new type of
noncommutative spaces which is very different from those associated with a
constant B field background.Comment: 11 pages, Latex, minor modification
A New H I Survey of Active Galaxies
We have conducted a new Arecibo survey for H I emission for 113 galaxies with
broad-line (type 1) active galactic nuclei (AGNs) out to recession velocities
as high as 35,000 km/s. The primary aim of the study is to obtain sensitive H I
spectra for a well-defined, uniformly selected sample of active galaxies that
have estimates of their black hole masses in order to investigate correlations
between H I properties and the characteristics of the AGNs. H I emission was
detected in 66 out of the 101 (65%) objects with spectra uncorrupted by radio
frequency interference, among which 45 (68%) have line profiles with adequate
signal-to-noise ratio and sufficiently reliable inclination corrections to
yield robust deprojected rotational velocities. This paper presents the basic
survey products, including an atlas of H I spectra, measurements of H I flux,
line width, profile asymmetry, optical images, optical spectroscopic
parameters, as well as a summary of a number of derived properties pertaining
to the host galaxies. To enlarge our primary sample, we also assemble all
previously published H I measurements of type 1 AGNs for which can can estimate
black hole masses, which total an additional 53 objects. The final
comprehensive compilation of 154 broad-line active galaxies, by far the largest
sample ever studied, forms the basis of our companion paper, which uses the H I
database to explore a number of properties of the AGN host galaxies.Comment: To appear in ApJS; 31 pages. Preprint will full-resolution figures
can be downloaded from http://www.ociw.edu/~lho/preprints/ms1.pd
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