562 research outputs found
HST unveils a compact mildly relativistic Broad Line Region in the candidate true type 2 NGC 3147
NGC 3147 has been considered the best case of a true type 2 AGN: an
unobscured AGN, based on the unabsorbed compact X-ray continuum, which lacks a
broad line region (BLR). However, the very low luminosity of NGC 3147 implies a
compact BLR, which produces very broad lines, hard to detect against the
dominant background host galaxy. Narrow (0.1"x0.1") slit HST spectroscopy
allowed us to exclude most of the host galaxy light, and revealed an H
line with an extremely broad base (FWZI km s). The line
profile shows a steep cutoff blue wing and an extended red wing, which match
the signature of a mildly relativistic thin accretion disk line profile. It is
indeed well fit with a nearly face on thin disk, at , with an
inner radius at r, which matches the prediction of
r from the relation. This
result questions the very existence of true type 2 AGN. Moreover, the detection
of a thin disk, which extends below 100 r in an
system, contradicts the current view of the accretion flow configuration at
extremely low accretion rates.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter
Multivariate forecasting model to optimize management of grape downy mildew control
Aim of this study was to develop a forecasting model for Plasmopara viticola to achieve rational disease management and to reduce the use of copper treatments in organic farming. Starting from meteo-climatic, agronomic and phytopathological data a partial least squares discriminant analysis was developed. Three different strategies were compared: treatments according to the established organic agricultural practice (standard); treatments according to the predictive model and untreated control where no fungicides against downy mildew were applied. The modelling approach was divided into three phases: 1) model calibration; 2) field testing and 3) a posteriori model performance evaluation. The prediction was separately considered and modelled for: i) disease onset and ii) disease progress. The results for phase 1 show a percentage of correct classification equal to 91.8 % for the disease onset with 3 days elapsed between the prediction of first potential attack and disease onset and to 91.23 % for disease progress. In field testing phase the percentage of correct classification was equal to about 81 % for both the analysed years (2009 and 2010). In the phase 3 the percentages were quietly higher for the 2009. The number of fungicide applications on the partial least squares discriminant analysis model was almost half compared with standard schedule both in 2009 and 2010. Finally this approach showed the possibility to reduce fungicidal treatments and to avoid applying copper not essential for disease control representing a first step in the model validation
Aggregation of monitoring datasets for functional diversity estimation
Long-term monitoring data is central for the analysis of biodiversity change and its drivers. Time series allow a more accurate evaluation of diversity indices, trait identification and community turnover. However, evaluating data collected across different monitoring programs remains complicated because of data discrepancies and inconsistencies. Here we propose a method for aggregating datasets using diffusion maps. The method is illustrated by aggregating long-term phytoplankton abundance data from the Wadden Sea and Southern North Sea gathered by two institutions located in Germany and The Netherlands. The aggregated data allowed us to infer species traits, to reconstruct the main trait axis which drives community functionality, ultimately quantifying functional diversity of the individual samples, having used only the co-occurrence of species in samples. Although functional diversity varies greatly among sampling stations, we detect a slight positive trend in German stations, which contrasts with the clear decreasing trend observed in most of the Dutch Wadden Sea stations. At the Terschelling transect, in Southern North Sea, the stations also showed contrasting estimations of functional diversity between off-shore and in-shore stations. Our research provides further evidence that traits and functional diversity can be robustly reconstructed from monitoring data alone, showing that data aggregation can increase the accuracy of this reconstruction, being able to aggregate heterogeneous datasets
The OPTX Project IV: How Reliable is [OIII] as a Measure of AGN Activity?
We compare optical and hard X-ray identifications of AGNs using a uniformly
selected (above a flux limit of f_2-8 keV = 3.5e-15 erg/cm2/s) and highly
optically spectroscopically complete ( > 80% for f_2-8 keV > 1e-14 erg/cm2/s
and > 60% below) 2-8 keV sample observed in three Chandra fields (CLANS,
CLASXS, and the CDF-N). We find that empirical emission-line ratio diagnostic
diagrams misidentify 20-50% of the X-ray selected AGNs that can be put on these
diagrams as star formers, depending on which division is used. We confirm that
there is a large (2 orders in magnitude) dispersion in the log ratio of the
[OIII]5007A to hard X-ray luminosities for the non-broad line AGNs, even after
applying reddening corrections to the [OIII] luminosities. We find that the
dispersion is similar for the broad-line AGNs, where there is not expected to
be much X-ray absorption from an obscuring torus around the AGN nor much
obscuration from the galaxy along the line-of-sight if the AGN is aligned with
the galaxy. We postulate that the X-ray selected AGNs that are misidentified by
the diagnostic diagrams have low [OIII] luminosities due to the complexity of
the structure of the narrow-line region, which causes many ionizing photons
from the AGN not to be absorbed. This would mean that the [OIII] luminosity can
only be used to predict the X-ray luminosity to within a factor of ~3 (one
sigma). Despite selection effects, we show that the shapes and normalizations
of the [OIII] and transformed hard X-ray luminosity functions show reasonable
agreement, suggesting that the [OIII] samples are not finding substantially
more AGNs at low redshifts than hard X-ray samples.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. 11 pages, 10
figure
Obscuring clouds playing hide-and-seek in the Active Nucleus H0557-385
This paper reports on two XMM-Newton observations of the Seyfert 1 Galaxy
H0557-385 obtained in 2006, which show the source at an historical low flux
state, more than a factor of 10 lower than a previous XMM-Newton look in 2002.
The low flux spectrum presents a strong Fe Kalpha line associated to a Compton
reflection continuum. An additional spectral line around 6.6 keV is required to
fit Kalpha emission from Fe XXV. The spectral curvature below 6 keV implies
obscuration by neutral gas with a column density of 8*10^{23}cm^{-2} partially
covering the primary emission, which still contributes for a few percent of the
soft X-ray emission. Absorption by ionised material on the line of sight is
required to fit the deep trough below 1 keV. The comparison of the two spectral
states shows that the flux transition is to be ascribed entirely to intervening
line-of-sight clouds with high column density.Comment: 5 pages, accepted for publication on MNRAS Letter
Constraining Torus Models for AGNs Using X-Ray Observations
In Unification Models, Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) are believed to be
surrounded by an axisymmetric structure of dust and gas, which greatly
influences their observed properties according to the direction from which they
are observed. The main aim of this work is to constrain the properties of this
obscuring material using X-Ray observations. The distribution of column
densities observed by Chandra in the Chandra Deep Field South is used to
determine geometrical constraints for already proposed torus models. It is
found that the best torus model is given by a classical `donut shape' with an
exponential angular dependency of the density profile. The opening angle is
strongly constrained by the observed column densities. Other proposed torus
models are clearly rejected by the X-Ray observations.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, submitted to A&
The BeppoSAX view of the hard X-ray background
First results on a medium-deep X-ray survey in the "new" 5-10 keV band
carried out with the MECS detectors onboard BeppoSAX are presented. The High
Energy Llarge Area Survey (HELLAS) is aimed to directly explore a band where
the energy density of the X-ray background is more than twice than that in the
soft (0.5-2.0 keV) band. The optical identification follow-up of the first ten
HELLAS hard X-ray sources indicate that Active Galactic Nuclei are the dominant
population at 5-10 keV fluxes of the order of 10e-13 cgs. We discuss the
implications of these findings for the AGN synthesis models for the XRB.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, uses psfig.sty. Accepted for publication in
Advances in Space Research, Proceedings of the 32nd Scientific Assembly of
COSPA
Probing the nuclear obscuration in radio-galaxies with near infrared imaging
We present the first near-infrared (K'-band) homogeneous observations of a
complete sub-sample of the 3CR radio catalogue comprising all High Excitation
Galaxies (HEGs) at z<0.3. After showing that the surface brightness
decomposition technique to measure central point-like sources is affected by
significant uncertainties for the objects in the studied sample, we present a
new, more accurate method based on the R-K' color profile. Via this method we
find a substantial nuclear K'-band excess in all but two HEGs -- most likely
directly associated to their nuclear emission -- and we measure the
corresponding 2.12 m nuclear luminosities. Within the frame of the
unification scheme for radio-loud active galactic nuclei, it appears that
obscuration alone is not able to account for the different nuclear properties
of the majority of the HEGs and Broad Line Radio Galaxies (BLRGs), and also
scattering of the (optically) hidden nuclear light from a compact region must
be invoked. More precisely, for ~70% of the HEGs the observed point-like
optical emission is dominated by the scattered component, while in the K'-band
both scattered and direct light passing through the torus contribute to the
observed nuclear luminosity. The estimated fraction of scattered light ranges
from a few tenths to a few percent, while the torus extinction is between
15<A_{V,torus}<50 mag with only a few exceptions with lower obscuration.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A; high resolution version can be
downloaded at http://www.astro.yale.edu/danilom
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