472 research outputs found
Non-LTE Models and Theoretical Spectra of Accretion Disks in Active Galactic Nuclei. III. Integrated Spectra for Hydrogen-Helium Disks
We have constructed a grid of non-LTE disk models for a wide range of black
hole mass and mass accretion rate, for several values of viscosity parameter
alpha, and for two extreme values of the black hole spin: the maximum-rotation
Kerr black hole, and the Schwarzschild (non-rotating) black hole. Our procedure
calculates self-consistently the vertical structure of all disk annuli together
with the radiation field, without any approximations imposed on the optical
thickness of the disk, and without any ad hoc approximations to the behavior of
the radiation intensity. The total spectrum of a disk is computed by summing
the spectra of the individual annuli, taking into account the general
relativistic transfer function. The grid covers nine values of the black hole
mass between M = 1/8 and 32 billion solar masses with a two-fold increase of
mass for each subsequent value; and eleven values of the mass accretion rate,
each a power of 2 times 1 solar mass/year. The highest value of the accretion
rate corresponds to 0.3 Eddington. We show the vertical structure of individual
annuli within the set of accretion disk models, along with their local emergent
flux, and discuss the internal physical self-consistency of the models. We then
present the full disk-integrated spectra, and discuss a number of
observationally interesting properties of the models, such as
optical/ultraviolet colors, the behavior of the hydrogen Lyman limit region,
polarization, and number of ionizing photons. Our calculations are far from
definitive in terms of the input physics, but generally we find that our models
exhibit rather red optical/UV colors. Flux discontinuities in the region of the
hydrogen Lyman limit are only present in cool, low luminosity models, while
hotter models exhibit blueshifted changes in spectral slope.Comment: 20 pages, 31 figures, ApJ in press, spectral models are available for
downloading at http://www.physics.ucsb.edu/~blaes/habk
On the Baldwin Effect in Active Galactic Nuclei: I. The Continuum-Spectrum - Mass Relationship
We suggest that the Baldwin Effect is a result of the spectral dependence of
the line-driving ionizing continuum on the black hole mass. We derive a
relationship between the mass of the central black hole and the broad emission
line luminosity in active galactic nuclei (AGN). Assuming the UV spectrum of
AGN is emitted from an optically thick medium we find an expression for the
characteristic energy of the ``UV bump'' in terms of the observable luminosity
and emission-line width. We show empirically and analytically that the bump
energy is anti-correlated with the black-hole mass and with the continuum
luminosity. Our model reproduces the observed inverse correlation between
equivalent width and continuum luminosity, yielding an explanation of the
Baldwin effect from first principles. The model gives a good fit to the Baldwin
Effect of the CIV line for a mean quasar EUV spectrum (Zheng et al. 1997) and
for several model spectra. The model also predicts a correlation between the
strength of the Baldwin Effect (the slope of the equivalent width as a function
of luminosity) and the ionization potential, consistent with recent data.Comment: 19 pages Latex, 2 figures. Accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
PKS 1004+13: A High-Inclination, Highly-Absorbed Radio-Loud QSO -- The First Radio-Loud BAL QSO at Low Redshift?
The existence of BAL outflows in only radio-quiet QSOs was thought to be an
important clue to mass ejection and the radio-loud - radio-quiet dichotomy.
Recently a few radio-loud BAL QSOs have been discovered at high redshift. We
present evidence that PKS 1004+13 is a radio-loud BAL QSO. It would be the
first known at low-redshift (z = 0.24), and one of the most radio luminous. For
PKS 1004+13, there appear to be broad absorption troughs of O VI, N V, Si IV,
and C IV, indicating high-ionization outflows up to about 10,000 km/s. There
are also two strong, broad (~500 km/s), high-ionization, associated absorption
systems that show partial covering of the continuum source. The strong UV
absorption we have detected suggests that the extreme soft-X-ray weakness of
PKS 1004+13 is primarily the result of absorption. The large radio-lobe
dominance indicates BAL and associated gas at high inclinations to the central
engine axis, perhaps in a line-of-sight that passes through an accretion disk
wind.Comment: To appear in Ap.J. Letters, 1999 (June or July); 4 pages, 5 figure
Polarization Structures in the Thomson-Scattered Emission Lines in Active Galactic Nuclei
A line photon incident in an electron-scattering medium is transferred in a
diffusive way both in real space and in frequency space, and the mean number of
scatterings changes as the wavelength shifts from the line center. This leads
to the profile broadening and polarization dependence on the wavelength shift
as a function of the Thomson optical depth . We find that the
polarization of the Thomson-scattered emission lines has a dip around the line
center when does not exceed a few. Various structures such as the
polarization flip are also seen. An application to an ionized halo component
surrounding the broad emission line region in active galactic nuclei is
considered and it is found that the polarization structures may still persist.
Brief discussions on observational implications are given.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
The Vertical Structure and Ultraviolet Spectrum of Accretion Disks Heated by Internal Dissipation in Active Galactic Nuclei
We present an improved calculation of the vertical structure and ultraviolet
spectrum of a dissipative accretion disk in an AGN. We calculate model spectra
in which the viscous stress is proportional to the total pressure, the gas
pressure only and the geometric mean of the radiation and gas pressures (cf.
Laor & Netzer 1989: LN89). As a result of a more complete treatment of
absorptive opacity, we find greater overall spectral curvature than did LN89,
as well as larger amplitudes in both the Lyman and HeII photoionization edges.
The local black body approximation is not a good description of the near UV
spectrum. With relativistic corrections (appropriate to non-rotating black
holes) included, we find that the near UV spectrum hardens with increasing
m-dot / m_8 (m-dot is the accretion rate in Eddington units, m_8 the black hole
mass in units of 10^8 M_Sun). The near UV spectrum is consistent with
observations if m-dot/ m_8 \sim 10^{-3}, but disks this cold would have large,
and unobserved, absorption features at the Lyman edge. The edge amplitude is
reduced when m-dot/m_8 is larger, but then the near-UV slope is too hard to
match observations. We conclude that models in which conventional disks orbit
non-rotating black holes do not adequately explain UV continuum production in
AGN.Comment: AAS LaTe
Non-LTE Models and Theoretical Spectra of Accretion Disks in Active Galactic Nuclei
We present self-consistent models of the vertical structure and emergent
spectrum of AGN accretion disks. The central object is assumed to be a
supermassive Kerr black hole. We demonstrate that NLTE effects and the effects
of a self-consistent vertical structure of a disk play a very important role in
determining the emergent radiation, and therefore should be taken into account.
In particular, NLTE models exhibit a largely diminished H I Lyman discontinuity
when compared to LTE models, and the He II discontinuity appears strongly in
emission for NLTE models. Consequently, the number of ionizing photons in the
He II Lyman continuum predicted by NLTE disk models is by 1 - 2 orders of
magnitude higher than that following from the black-body approximation. This
prediction has important implications for ionization models of AGN broad line
regions, and for models of the intergalactic radiation field and the ionization
of helium in the intergalactic medium.Comment: 11 pages; 2 postscript figures; LaTeX, AASPP4 macro; to appear in the
Astrophysical Journal (Letters
CAIXA: a Catalogue of AGN In the XMM-Newton Archive II. Multiwavelength correlations
We presented CAIXA, a Catalogue of AGN in the XMM-Newton Archive, in a
companion paper. Here, a systematic search for correlations between the X-ray
spectral properties and the multiwavelength data was performed for the sources
in CAIXA. All the significant (>99.9% confidence level) correlations are
discussed along with their physical implications on current models of AGN. Two
main correlations are discussed in this paper: a) a very strong
anti-correlation between the FWHM of the H optical line and the ratio
between the soft and the hard X-ray luminosity. Although similar
anti-correlations between optical line width and X-ray spectral steepness have
already been discussed in the literature (see e.g., Laor et al. 1994, Boller et
al. 1996, Brandt et al. 1997), we consider the formulation we present in this
paper is more fundamental, as it links model-independent quantities. Coupled
with a strong anti-correlation between the V to hard X-ray flux ratio and the
H FHWM, it supports scenarios for the origin of the soft excess in AGN,
which require strong suppression of the hard X-ray emission; b) a strong (and
expected) correlation between the X-ray luminosity and the black hole mass. Its
slope, flatter than 1, is consistent with Eddington ratio-dependent bolometric
corrections, such as that recently proposed by Vasudevan & Fabian (2009).
Moreover, we critically review through various statistical tests the role that
distance biases play in the strong radio to X-ray luminosity correlation found
in CAIXA and elsewhere; we conclude that only complete, unbiased samples (such
as that recently published by Behar & Laor, 2008) should be used to draw
observational constraints on the origin of radio emission in radio-quiet AGN.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysics; two figures erroneously attached by astroph to the paper were
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