87 research outputs found

    Quasars: Active nuclei of young galaxies

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    The hypothetical properties of 'young' galaxies and possible methods of observing them are discussed. It is proposed that star formation first takes place in the central regions of protogalaxies which may appear as quasar-like objects. An evolutionary scheme is outlined in which the radio quasars are transformed in time into the nuclei of radio galaxies

    On the continuing stellar formation in the central regions of some globular clusters and their relation to the pulsars

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    The discrepancy between the predicted and observed quantities of gas in the central regions of massive globular clusters is discussed. It is hypothesized that star formation continues in the central regions by means of gas released during stellar evolution or trapped by the central region when the globular clusters pass through the center of the galaxy. Nine globular clusters are indicated at distances less than 1000 ps from which radio pulsars or X-ray sources are observed. It is argued that they could have formed relatively recently in closed pairs in the central regions and then ejected at the stage of supernova bursts with velocities over 100 ks/s

    Dependence of the optical continuous spectrum of quasars on their red-shift

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    Dependence of optical continuous spectrum of quasi-stellar sources on red shif

    Blind search for the real sample: Application to the origin of ultra-high energy cosmic rays

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    We suggest a method for statistical tests which does not suffer from a posteriori manipulations with tested samples (e.g. cuts optimization) and does not require a somewhat obscure procedure of the penalty estimate. The idea of the method is to hide the real sample (before it has been studied) among a large number of artificial samples, drawn from a random distribution expressing the null hypothesis, and then to search for it as the one demonstrating the strongest hypothesized effect. The statistical significance of the effect in this approach is the inverse of the maximal number of random samples at which the search was successful. We have applied the method to revisit the problem of correlation between the arrival directions of ultra-high energy cosmic rays and BL Lac objects. No significant correlation was found.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, accepted to ApJ Letter

    A Semi-automatic Search for Giant Radio Galaxy Candidates and their Radio-Optical Follow-up

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    We present results of a search for giant radio galaxies (GRGs) with a projected largest linear size in excess of 1 Mpc. We designed a computational algorithm to identify contiguous emission regions, large and elongated enough to serve as GRG candidates, and applied it to the entire 1.4-GHz NRAO VLA Sky survey (NVSS). In a subsequent visual inspection of 1000 such regions we discovered 15 new GRGs, as well as many other candidate GRGs, some of them previously reported, for which no redshift was known. Our follow-up spectroscopy of 25 of the brighter hosts using two 2.1-m telescopes in Mexico, and four fainter hosts with the 10.4-m Gran Telescopio Canarias (GTC), yielded another 24 GRGs. We also obtained higher-resolution radio images with the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array for GRG candidates with inconclusive radio structures in NVSS.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, to appear in the proceedings of The Universe of Digital Sky Surveys, Naples, Italy, Nov 25-28, 2014; Astrophysics and Space Science, eds. N.R. Napolitano et a

    Quasars Clustering at z approx 3 on Scales less sim 10 h^{-1} Mpc

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    We test the hypothesis whether high redshift QSOs would preferentially appear in small groups or pairs, and if they are associated with massive, young clusters. We carried out a photometric search for \Ly emitters on scales ≲10h−1\lesssim 10 h^{-1} Mpc, in the fields of a sample of 47 z≈3z\approx3 known QSOs. Wide and narrow band filter color-magnitude diagrams were generated for each of the 6′.6×6′.66'.6\times6'.6 fields. A total of 13 non resolved objects with a significant color excess were detected as QSO candidates at a redshift similar to that of the target. All the candidates are significantly fainter than the reference QSOs, with only 2 of them within 2 magnitudes of the central object. Follow-up spectroscopic observations have shown that 5, i.e., about 40% of the candidates, are QSOs at the same redshift of the target; 4 are QSOs at different z (two of them probably being a lensed pair at z = 1.47); 2 candidates are unresolved HII galaxies at z∼\sim0.3; one unclassified and one candidate turned out to be a CCD flaw. These data indicate that at least 10% of the QSOs at z∼\sim3 do have companions. We have also detected a number of resolved, rather bright \Ly Emitter Candidates. Most probably a large fraction of them might be bright galaxies with [OII] emission, at z≈\approx 0.3. The fainter population of our candidates corresponds to the current expectations. Thus, there are no strong indication for the existence of an overdensity of \Ly galaxies brighter than m ≈\approx 25 around QSOs at z≈z\approx 3.Comment: 29 pages, 8 figures, tar gzip LaTex file, accepted to appear in Ap
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