300 research outputs found
Contribution of a Disk Component to Single Peaked Broad Lines of Active Galactic Nuclei
We study the disk emission component hidden in the single-peaked Broad
Emission Lines (BELs) of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN). We compare the observed
broad lines from a sample of 90 Seyfert 1 spectra taken from the Sloan Digital
Sky Survey with simulated line profiles. We consider a two-component Broad Line
Region (BLR) model where an accretion disk and a surrounding non-disk region
with isotropic cloud velocities generate the simulated BEL profiles. The
analysis is mainly based in measurements of the full widths (at 10%, 20% and
30% of the maximum intensity) and of the asymmetries of the line profiles.
Comparing these parameters for the simulated and observed H broad
lines, we {found} that the hidden disk emission {may} be present in BELs even
if the characteristic {of two peaked line profiles is} absent. For the
available sample of objects (Seyfert 1 galaxies with single-peaked BELs), our
study indicates that, {in the case of the hidden disk emission in single peaked
broad line profiles}, the disk inclination tends to be small (mostly
) and that the contribution of the disk emission to the total flux
should be smaller than the contribution of the surrounding region.Comment: 18 Figures, 1 Table, MNRAS-accepted. MNRAS-accepte
Interplay between telecommunications and face-to-face interactions - a study using mobile phone data
In this study we analyze one year of anonymized telecommunications data for
over one million customers from a large European cellphone operator, and we
investigate the relationship between people's calls and their physical
location. We discover that more than 90% of users who have called each other
have also shared the same space (cell tower), even if they live far apart.
Moreover, we find that close to 70% of users who call each other frequently (at
least once per month on average) have shared the same space at the same time -
an instance that we call co-location. Co-locations appear indicative of
coordination calls, which occur just before face-to-face meetings. Their number
is highly predictable based on the amount of calls between two users and the
distance between their home locations - suggesting a new way to quantify the
interplay between telecommunications and face-to-face interactions
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
The evolution of the Compton thick fraction and the nature of obscuration for AGN in the Chandra Deep Field South
(Abridged) We present the results from the X-ray spectral analysis of high-z
AGN in the CDFS, making use of the new 4Ms data set and new X-ray spectral
models from Brightman & Nandra, which account for Compton scattering and the
geometry of the circumnuclear material. Our goals are to ascertain to what
extent the torus paradigm of local AGN is applicable at earlier epochs and to
evaluate the evolution of the Compton thick fraction (f_CT) with z, important
for XRB synthesis models and understanding the accretion history of the
universe. In addition to the torus models, we measure the fraction of scattered
nuclear light, f_scatt known to be dependant on covering factor of the
circumnuclear materal, and use this to aid in our understanding of its
geometry. We find that the covering factor of the circumnuclear material is
correlated with NH, and as such the most heavily obscured AGN are in fact also
the most geometrically buried. We come to these conclusions from the result
that f_scatt decreases as NH increases and from the prevalence of the torus
model with the smallest opening angle as best fit model in the fits to the most
obscured AGN. We find that a significant fraction of sources (~ 20%) in the
CDFS are likely to be buried in material with close to 4 pi coverage having
been best fit by the torus model with a 0\degree opening angle. Furthermore, we
find 41 CTAGN in the CDFS using the new torus models, 29 of which we report
here for the first time. We bin our sample by z in order to investigate the
evolution of f_CT. Once we have accounted for biases and incompleteness we find
a significant increase in the intrinsic f_CT, normalised to LX= 10^43.5 erg/s,
from \approx 20% in the local universe to \approx 40% at z=1-4.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
Obscured GOODS AGN and Their Host Galaxies at z < 1.25: The Slow Black Hole Growth Phase
We compute black hole masses and bolometric luminosities for 87 obscured AGN
in the redshift range 0.25 < z < 1.25, selected from the GOODS deep
multi-wavelength survey fields via their X-ray emission. We fit the optical
images and obtain morphological parameters for the host galaxy, separating the
galaxy from its central point source, thereby obtaining a four-band optical SED
for each active nucleus. We calculate bolometric luminosities for these AGN by
reddening a normalized mean SED of GOODS broad-line AGN to match the observed
central point-source SED of each obscured AGN. This estimate of Lbol has a
smaller spread than simple bolometric corrections to the X-ray luminosity or
direct integration of the observed multi-wavelength SED, suggesting it is a
better measure. We estimate central black hole masses from the bulge
luminosities. The black hole masses span a wide range, 7 x 10^6 M_sun to 6 x
10^9 M_sun; the median black hole mass is 5 x 10^8 M_sun. The majority of these
AGN have L/L_Edd < 0.01, and we detect no significant evolution of the mean
Eddington ratio to z = 1.25. This implies that the bulk of black hole growth in
these obscured AGN must have occurred at z > 1 and that we are observing these
AGN in a slow- or no-growth state.Comment: Accepted to ApJ; 17 pages, 10 figures, 2 tables; Updated version has
1 corrected referenc
Quasars: the characteristic spectrum and the induced radiative heating
Using information on the cosmic X-ray background and the cumulative light of
active galactic nuclei at infrared wavelengths, the estimated local mass
density of galactic massive black holes (MBHs) and published AGN composite
spectra in the optical, UV and X-ray, we compute the characteristic
angular-integrated, broad-band spectral energy distribution of the average
quasar in the universe. We demonstrate that the radiation from such sources can
photoionize and Compton heat the plasma surrounding them up to an equilibrium
Compton temperature (Tc) of 2x10^7 K. It is shown that circumnuclear
obscuration cannot significantly affect the net gas Compton heating and cooling
rates, so that the above Tc value is approximately characteristic of both
obscured and unobscured quasars. This temperature is above typical gas
temperatures in elliptical galaxies and just above the virial temperatures of
giant ellipticals. The general results of this work can be used for accurate
calculations of the feedback effect of MBHs on both their immediate environs
and the more distant interstellar medium of their host galaxies.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures. Revised version accepted for publication in
MNRA
The Chandra COSMOS Survey: III. Optical and Infrared Identification of X-ray Point Sources
The Chandra COSMOS Survey (C-COSMOS) is a large, 1.8 Ms, Chandra program that
has imaged the central 0.9 deg^2 of the COSMOS field down to limiting depths of
1.9 10^-16 erg cm^-2 s-1 in the 0.5-2 keV band, 7.3 10^-16 erg cm^-2 s^-1 in
the 2-10 keV band, and 5.7 10^-16 erg cm^-2 s-1 in the 0.5-10 keV band. In this
paper we report the i, K and 3.6micron identifications of the 1761 X-ray point
sources. We use the likelihood ratio technique to derive the association of
optical/infrared counterparts for 97% of the X-ray sources. For most of the
remaining 3%, the presence of multiple counterparts or the faintness of the
possible counterpart prevented a unique association. For only 10 X-ray sources
we were not able to associate a counterpart, mostly due to the presence of a
very bright field source close by. Only 2 sources are truly empty fields.
Making use of the large number of X-ray sources, we update the "classic locus"
of AGN and define a new locus containing 90% of the AGN in the survey with full
band luminosity >10^42 erg/s. We present the linear fit between the total i
band magnitude and the X-ray flux in the soft and hard band, drawn over 2
orders of magnitude in X-ray flux, obtained using the combined C-COSMOS and
XMM-COSMOS samples. We focus on the X-ray to optical flux ratio (X/O) and we
test its known correlation with redshift and luminosity, and a recently
introduced anti-correlation with the concentration index (C). We find a strong
anti-correlation (though the dispersion is of the order of 0.5 dex) between C
and X/O, computed in the hard band, and that 90% of the obscured AGN in the
sample with morphological information live in galaxies with regular morphology
(bulgy and disky/spiral), suggesting that secular processes govern a
significant fraction of the BH growth at X-ray luminosities of 10^43- 10^44.5
erg/s.Comment: 21 pages, 17 figures, 4 tables; accepted for publication in ApJS. The
catalog is available at the urls listed in the pape
Herschel-ATLAS: Far-infrared properties of radio-loud and radio-quiet quasars
This is pre-copyedited, author-produced pdf of an article accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society following peer review. The version of record, E. Kalfountzou, et al., ‘Herschel-ATLAS: Far-infrared properties of radio-loud and radio-quiet quasars’, MNRAS, Vol 42(2): 1181-1196, first published online June 11, 2014, is available online via doi: 10.1093/mnras/stu782 Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society.We have constructed a sample of radio-loud and radio-quiet quasars from the Faint Images Radio Sky at Twenty-one centimetres and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 7, over the Herschel-ATLAS Phase 1 area (9h, 12h and 14 h . 5 ). Using a stacking analysis, we find a significant correlation between the far-infrared (FIR) luminosity and 1.4-GHz luminosity for radio-loud quasars. Partial correlation analysis confirms the intrinsic correlation after removing the redshift contribution, while for radio-quiet quasars, no partial correlation is found. Using a single-temperature grey-body model, we find a general trend of lower dust temperatures in case of radio-loud quasars compared to radio-quiet quasars. Also, radio-loud quasars are found to have almost constant mean values of dust mass along redshift and optical luminosity bins. In addition, we find that radio-loud quasars at lower optical luminosities tend to have on average higher FIR and 250-μm luminosity with respect to radio-quiet quasars with the same optical luminosites. Even if we use a two-temperature grey-body model to describe the FIR data, the FIR luminosity excess remains at lower optical luminosities. These results suggest that powerful radio jets are associated with star formation especially at lower accretion ratesPeer reviewe
Observing Supermassive Black Holes across cosmic time: from phenomenology to physics
In the last decade, a combination of high sensitivity, high spatial
resolution observations and of coordinated multi-wavelength surveys has
revolutionized our view of extra-galactic black hole (BH) astrophysics. We now
know that supermassive black holes reside in the nuclei of almost every galaxy,
grow over cosmological times by accreting matter, interact and merge with each
other, and in the process liberate enormous amounts of energy that influence
dramatically the evolution of the surrounding gas and stars, providing a
powerful self-regulatory mechanism for galaxy formation. The different
energetic phenomena associated to growing black holes and Active Galactic
Nuclei (AGN), their cosmological evolution and the observational techniques
used to unveil them, are the subject of this chapter. In particular, I will
focus my attention on the connection between the theory of high-energy
astrophysical processes giving rise to the observed emission in AGN, the
observable imprints they leave at different wavelengths, and the methods used
to uncover them in a statistically robust way. I will show how such a combined
effort of theorists and observers have led us to unveil most of the SMBH growth
over a large fraction of the age of the Universe, but that nagging
uncertainties remain, preventing us from fully understating the exact role of
black holes in the complex process of galaxy and large-scale structure
formation, assembly and evolution.Comment: 46 pages, 21 figures. This review article appears as a chapter in the
book: "Astrophysical Black Holes", Haardt, F., Gorini, V., Moschella, U and
Treves A. (Eds), 2015, Springer International Publishing AG, Cha
Paving (through) Amazonia: Neoliberal Urbanism and the Reperipheralization of Roraima
This paper examines the neoliberal reshaping of infrastructure provision in Brazil's extreme north since the mid-1990s, when roadway investments resulted in unprecedented regional connectivity. The BR-174 upgrade, the era's most important project, marked a transition from resource-based developmentalism to free-market transnationalism. Primarily concerned with urban competitiveness, the federal government funded the trunk roadway's paving to facilitate manufacturing exports from Manaus. While an effort was made to minimize deforestation, planners sidelined development implications in adjacent Roraima. The state's urban system has thus experienced reperipheralization and intensified primacy. Market-led growth now compounds the inheritance of hierarchical centralism and ongoing governmental neglect. Our study shows a vast territory dependent on primate cities for basic goods and services. Travelling with Roraimans from bypassed towns, we detected long-distance passenger transportation and surface logistics with selective routes. Heterogeneous Roraiman (im)mobilities comprise middle-class tourism and heightened consumerism as well as informal mobility tactics and transnational circulations of precarious labor. The paper exhorts neoliberal urbanism research to look beyond both Euro America's metropoles and their Global South counterparts. Urbanization dynamics in Brazil's extreme north demonstrate that market-disciplined investments to globalize cities produce far-reaching spatial effects. These are felt even by functionally-articulated-yet-marginalized peripheries in ostensibly remote locations
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