32 research outputs found
The Apparently Normal Galaxy Hosts for Two Luminous Quasars
HST images (with WFPC2) of PHL~909\ () and PG~0052251\ () show that these luminous radio-quiet quasars each occur in an
apparently normal host galaxy. The host galaxy of PHL~909 is an elliptical
galaxy ( E4) and the host of PG~0052251 is a spiral (~Sb). Both
host galaxies are several tenths of a magnitude brighter than , the
characteristic Schechter luminosity of field galaxies.
The images of PHL~909 and PG~0052251, when compared with HST images of
other objects in our sample of 20 luminous, small-redshift ()
quasars, show that luminous quasars occur in a variety of environments. The
local environments of the luminous quasars range from luminous ellipticals, to
apparently normal host galaxies, to complex systems of interacting components,
to faint (and as yet undetected) hosts.
The bright HII regions of the host galaxy of PG~0052251 provide an
opportunity to measure directly the metallicity of the host of a luminous
quasar, to establish an upper limit to the mass of the nuclear AGN (i.e., the
putative black hole source), and to test stringently the cosmological
hypothesisthat the galaxy and the quasar are both at the distance indicated by
the quasar redshift.Comment: 32 pages, LaTeX file. Seven postscript figures available from
anonymous ftp to ftp://eku.sns.ias.edu/pub/sofia/ as phlpgfg1.ps,
phlpgfg2.ps, phlpgfg3.ps, phlpgfg4.ps, phlpgfg5.ps, phlpgfg6a.ps,
phlpgfg6b.ps, phlpgfg7.ps. To appear in ApJ, February 1, 199
Galaxy Clustering Around Nearby Luminous Quasars
We examine the clustering of galaxies around a sample of 20 luminous low
redshift (z<0.30) quasars observed with the Wide Field Camera-2 on the Hubble
Space Telescope. The HST resolution makes possible galaxy identification
brighter than V=23.5 and as close as 2'' to the quasar. We find a significant
enhancement of galaxies within a projected separation of < 100 kpc/h of the
quasars. If we model the qso/galaxy correlation function as a power law with a
slope given by the galaxy/galaxy correlation function, we find that the ratio
of the qso/galaxy to galaxy/galaxy correlation functions is . The
galaxy counts within r<15 kpc/h of the quasars are too high for the density
profile to have an appreciable core radius ( > 100 kpc). Our results reinforce
the idea that low redshift quasars are located preferentially in groups of
10-20 galaxies rather than in rich clusters. We see no significant difference
in the clustering amplitudes derived from radio-loud and radio-quiet
subsamples.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures (included), 2 tables, Apj in pres
HST Images of Nearby Luminous Quasars
Strong upper limits are placed on the visual-band brightnesses of galactic
hosts for four luminous, radio-quiet quasars with redshifts between
and~ that were studied with the HST's Wide Field/Planetary Camera-2.
Typical upper limits on the luminosities of galactic hosts are about mag
fainter than for spirals and about mag fainter than for
ellipticals. The galactic hosts of the quasars are more than a magnitude and a
half fainter than the median integrated absolute magnitude of Seyfert galaxies.
If the detection limits are determined using featureless simulated galaxies
instead of observed galaxy images, then the detection limits for spirals are
0.5--1.0 mag less stringent. These results are consistent with the hypothesis
that the quasar phenomenon corresponds to the early stages of galaxy formation,
before extensive star formation occurs.Comment: Compressed, uuencoded postscript file. Institute for Advanced Study
number AST 94/4
Hubble Space Telescope Images of Nearby Luminous Quasars
Observations with the Wide-Field Camera of the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) are presented for eight intrinsically luminous quasars with redshifts between 0.16 and 0.29. These observations, when combined with a similar HST study of the quasar PKS 2349-014, show that luminous nearby quasars exist in a variety of environments. Seven companion galaxies brighter than M(V) = 16.5 (H(sub 0) = 100 km s(sup -1) Mpc(sup -1), Omega(sub 0) = 1.0) lie within a projected distance of 25 kpc of the quasars; three of the companions are located closer than 3'' (6 kpc projected distance) from the quasars, well within the volume that would be enclosed by a typical L* host galaxy. The observed association of quasars and companion galaxies is statistically significant and may he an important element in the luminous-quasar phenomenon. Apparent host galaxies are detected for three of the quasars: PG 1116+215, 3C 273, and PG 1444+407; the hosts have an average absolute magnitude of about 0.6 mag brighter than L*. The agreement between the previously published major-axis directions in ground-based images and in the present HST images of 3C 273 and PG 1444+407 constitutes important evidence supporting the reality of these candidate host galaxies. Upper limits are placed on the visual-band brightnesses of representative galactic hosts for all the quasars. These limits are established by placing galaxy images obtained with HST underneath the quasars and measuring at what faintness level the known galaxies are detected. On average, the HST spirals would have been detected if they were as faint as 1 mag below L*, and the early-type galaxies could have been detected down to a brightness level of about L*, where L* is the Schechter characteristic luminosity of field galaxies. Smooth, featureless galaxy models (exponential disks or de Vaucouleurs profiles) are fitted to the residual light after a best-fitting point source is subtracted from the quasar images. The results show that smooth spiral galaxies brighter than, on average, about L*, would have been detected. These upper limits, or possible detections, are consistent with, for example, the eight luminous quasars studied in this paper, occurring in host galaxies that have a Shechter luminosity function with a lower cutoff in the range 0.01-0.1 L*. Tests are performed to determine if our failure to detect, in some cases, luminous host galaxies could be an artifact caused by our analysis procedures. These tests include comparing the measured point-spread function (PSF) for our HST observations with the PSFs used in previous ground-based studies of host galaxies, measuring the fluctuations in the sky signals that were subtracted from the quasar images, evaluating empirically the effects of using different stellar PSFs in the analysis, carrying out the subtraction of the stellar (nuclear) source in different ways, creating and analyzing artificial active galactic nuclei (AGNs) with known surface brightnesses, and fitting the observed quasar light to an analytic model that includes a host galaxy
The CIV-MgII Kinematics Connection in <z>~0.7 Galaxies
We have examined Faint Object Spectrograph data from the Hubble Space
Telescope Archive for CIV 1548,1550 absorption associated with 40 MgII
2796,2803 absorption-selected galaxies at 0.4 < z < 1.4. We report a strong
correlation between MgII kinematics, measured in 6 km/s resolution HIRES/Keck
spectra, and W_r(1548); this implies a physical connection between the
processes that produce "outlying velocity" MgII clouds and high ionization
galactic/halo gas. We found no trend in ionization condition,
W_r(1548)/W_r(2796), with galaxy-QSO line-of-sight separation for 13 systems
with confirmed associated galaxies, suggesting no obvious ionization gradient
with galactocentric distance in these higher redshift galaxies. We find
tentative evidence (2-sigma) that W_r(1548)/W_r(2796) is anti-correlated with
galaxy color; if further data corroborate this trend, in view of the
strong CIV-MgII kinematics correlation, it could imply a connection between
stellar populations, star formation episodes, and the kinematics and ionization
conditions of halo gas at z~1.Comment: Accepted to Astrophysical Journal Letters; 4 pages; 3 figures;
emulateapj.st
The host galaxies of three radio-loud quasars: 3C 48, 3C 345, and B2 1425+267
Observations with the Wide-Field/Planetary Camera-2 of the Hubble Space
Telescope (HST) are presented for three radio-loud quasars: 3C 48 (z=0.367), B2
1425+267 (z=0.366), and 3C 345 (z=0.594). All three quasars have luminous (~4
L^*) galaxies as hosts, which are either elliptical (B2 1425+267 and 3C 345) or
interacting (3C 48), and all hosts are 0.5 - 1.0 mag bluer in (V-I) than other
galaxies with the same overall morphology at similar redshifts to the quasars.
The host of 3C 48 has many H II regions and a very extended tidal tail.
All nine of the radio-loud quasars studied here and in Bahcall et al. (1997)
either have bright elliptical hosts or occur in interacting systems. There is a
robust correlation between the radio emission of the quasar and the luminosity
of host galaxy; the radio-loud quasars reside in galaxies that are on average
about 1 mag brighter than hosts of the radio-quiet quasars.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. 3 postscript and 3 jpeg figures.
Original figures may be found in ftp://eku.sns.ias.edu/pub/sofia/RadioLoud
UBVRIz Light Curves of 51 Type II Supernovae
We present a compilation of UBV RIz light curves of 51 type II supernovae
discovered during the course of four different surveys during 1986 to 2003: the
Cerro Tololo Supernova Survey, the Calan/Tololo Supernova Program (C&T), the
Supernova Optical and Infrared Survey (SOIRS), and the Carnegie Type II
Supernova Survey (CATS). The photometry is based on template-subtracted images
to eliminate any potential host galaxy light contamination, and calibrated from
foreground stars. This work presents these photometric data, studies the color
evolution using different bands, and explores the relation between the
magnitude at maximum brightness and the brightness decline parameter (s) from
maximum light through the end of the recombination phase. This parameter is
found to be shallower for redder bands and appears to have the best correlation
in the B band. In addition, it also correlates with the plateau duration, being
thus shorter (longer) for larger (smaller) s values.Comment: 110 pages, 9 Figures, 6 Tables, accepted in A
Low and High Ionization Absorption Properties of Mg II Absorption-Selected Galaxies at Intermediate Redshifts. II. Taxonomy, Kinematics, and Galaxies
[Abridged] We examine a sample of 45 Mg II absorption-selected systems over
the redshift range 0.4 to 1.4. Mg II and Fe II absorption profiles were
observed at a resolution of ~6 km/s with HIRES/Keck. Lyman-alpha and C IV data
were measured in archival FOS/HST spectra (~230 km/s). We perform a
multivariate analysis of W(MgII), W(FeII), W(CIV) and W(Lya) (rest-frame)
equivalent widths and the Mg II kinematic spread. We find five categories of Mg
II absorbers: "Classic", "C IV-deficient", "Single/Weak", "Double", and
"DLA/HI-Rich". There is a strong connection between low-ionization kinematics
and the location of an absorber on the W(CIV)-W(MgII) plane. In most absorbers
a significant fraction of the C IV arises in a phase separate from Mg II. Many
of the C IV profiles are resolved in the FOS spectra due to velocity
structure.. For 16 galaxies, we compare the available absorption-line
properties (taken from Churchill et al. 2000, Paper I) to the galaxy properties
but find no significant (greater than 3-sigma) correlations, although several
suggestive trends are apparent. We compare the locations of our intermediate
redshift absorbers on the W(CIV)-W(MgII) plane with those of lower and higher
redshift data taken from the literature and find evidence for evolution that is
connected with the Mg II kinematics. We discuss the potential of using the
above categorizations of absorbers to understand the evolution in the
underlying physical processes giving rise to the gas and governing its
ionization phases and kinematics.Comment: Accepted: The Astrophysical Journal; Work based upon data presented
in Paper I [astro-ph/0005585