45 research outputs found
The MUSE Ultra Deep Field (MUDF). IV. A pair of X-ray weak quasars at the heart of two extended Ly{\alpha} nebulae
We present the results obtained from follow-up observations of the MUSE Ultra
Deep Field (MUDF) at X-ray energies with XMM-Newton. The MUDF is centred on a
unique field with two bright, physically associated quasars at ,
separated by 500 kpc in projection. Both quasars are embedded within
extended Ly nebulae ( at a surface brightness flux
level of ), whose
elongated morphology is suggestive of an extended filament connecting the
quasar haloes. The new X-ray observations presented here allow us to
characterise the physical properties (e.g. X-ray slope, luminosities, gas
column densities) in the innermost region of the MUDF quasars. We find that
both quasars are X-ray underluminous compared to objects at similar ultraviolet
luminosities. Based on our X-ray spectral analysis, absorbing columns of
10 cm appear unlikely, therefore such a weakness
is possibly intrinsic. When also including literature data, we do not observe
any detectable trend between the area of the nebulae and nuclear luminosities
at both the rest-frame 2 keV and 2500 . The area is also not
correlated with the X-ray photon index nor with the integrated band flux in the
hard band (210 keV). We also do not find any trend between the extended
Ly emission of the nebulae and the nuclear X-ray luminosity. Finally,
the properties of the MUDF quasars' nebulae are consistent with the observed
relation between the Ly integrated luminosity of the nebulae and their
area. Our results suggest that the quasar ionization power is not a strong
driver of the morphology and size of the nebulae.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, reference added, published in MNRA
Integrating multiple scientific computing needs via a Private Cloud infrastructure
In a typical scientific computing centre, diverse applications coexist and share a single physical infrastructure. An underlying Private Cloud facility eases the management and maintenance of heterogeneous use cases such as multipurpose or application-specific batch farms, Grid sites catering to different communities, parallel interactive data analysis facilities and others. It allows to dynamically and efficiently allocate resources to any application and to tailor the virtual machines according to the applications' requirements. Furthermore, the maintenance of large deployments of complex and rapidly evolving middleware and application software is eased by the use of virtual images and contextualization techniques; for example, rolling updates can be performed easily and minimizing the downtime. In this contribution we describe the Private Cloud infrastructure at the INFN-Torino Computer Centre, that hosts a full-fledged WLCG Tier-2 site and a dynamically expandable PROOF-based Interactive Analysis Facility for the ALICE experiment at the CERN LHC and several smaller scientific computing applications. The Private Cloud building blocks include the OpenNebula software stack, the GlusterFS filesystem (used in two different configurations for worker- and service-class hypervisors) and the OpenWRT Linux distribution (used for network virtualization). A future integration into a federated higher-level infrastructure is made possible by exposing commonly used APIs like EC2 and by using mainstream contextualization tools like CloudInit
Managing a tier-2 computer centre with a private cloud infrastructure
In a typical scientific computing centre, several applications coexist and share a single physical infrastructure. An underlying Private Cloud infrastructure eases the management and maintenance of such heterogeneous applications (such as multipurpose or application-specific batch farms, Grid sites, interactive data analysis facilities and others), allowing dynamic allocation resources to any application. Furthermore, the maintenance of large deployments of complex and rapidly evolving middleware and application software is eased by the use of virtual images and contextualization techniques. Such infrastructures are being deployed in some large centres (see e.g. the CERN Agile Infrastructure project), but with several open-source tools reaching maturity this is becoming viable also for smaller sites. In this contribution we describe the Private Cloud infrastructure at the INFN-Torino Computer Centre, that hosts a full-fledged WLCG Tier-2 centre, an Interactive Analysis Facility for the ALICE experiment at the CERN LHC and several smaller scientific computing applications. The private cloud building blocks include the OpenNebula software stack, the GlusterFS filesystem and the OpenWRT Linux distribution (used for network virtualization); a future integration into a federated higher-level infrastructure is made possible by exposing commonly used APIs like EC2 and OCCI
Investigating the complex X-ray spectrum of a broad-line 2MASS red quasar: XMM-Newton observation of FTM 0830+3759
We report results from a 50 ks XMM-Newton observation of the dust-reddened
broad-line quasar FTM 0830+3759 (z=0.413) selected from the FIRST/2MASS Red
Quasar survey. For this AGN, a very short 9 ks Chandra exposure had suggested a
feature-rich X-ray spectrum and HST images revealed a very disturbed host
galaxy morphology. Contrary to classical, optically-selected quasars, the X-ray
properties of red (i.e. with J-Ks> 1.7 and R-Ks> 4) broad line quasars are
still quite unexplored, although there is a growing consensus that, due to
moderate obscuration, these objects can offer a unique view of spectral
components typically swamped by the AGN light in normal, blue quasars. The
XMM-Newton observation discussed here has definitely confirmed the complexity
of the X-ray spectrum revealing the presence of a cold (or mildly-ionized)
absorber with Nh ~10^{22} cm^-2 along the line of sight to the nucleus and a
Compton reflection component accompanied by an intense Fe K emission line in
this quasar with a Lum(2-10) ~5 x 10^{44} erg/s. A soft-excess component is
also required by the data. The match between the column density derived by our
spectral analysis and that expected on the basis of reddening due to the dust
suggests the possibility that both absorptions occur in the same medium. FTM
0830+3759 is characterized by an extinction/absorption-corrected
X-ray-to-optical flux ratio alphaox = -2.3, that is steeper than expected on
the basis of its UV luminosity. These findings indicate that the X-ray
properties of FTM 0830+3759 differs from those typically observed for
optically-selected broad line quasars with comparable hard X-ray luminosity.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
A Reemerging Bright Soft X-Ray State of the Changing-look Active Galactic Nucleus 1ES 1927+654:A Multiwavelength View
1ES1927+654 is a nearby active galactic nucleus (AGN) that has shown an enigmatic outburst in optical/UV followed by X-rays, exhibiting strange variability patterns at timescales of months to years. Here we report the unusual X-ray, UV, and radio variability of the source in its postflare state (2022 Januaryâ2023 May). First, we detect an increase in the soft X-ray (0.3â2 keV) flux from 2022 May to 2023 May by almost a factor of 5, which we call the bright soft state. The hard X-ray 2â10 keV flux increased by a factor of 2, while the UV flux density did not show any significant changes (â€30%) in the same period. The integrated energy pumped into the soft and hard X-rays during this period of 11 months is âŒ3.57 Ă 10 ^50 erg and 5.9 Ă 10 ^49 erg, respectively. From the energetics, it is evident that whatever is producing the soft excess (SE) is pumping out more energy than either the UV or hard X-ray source. Since the energy source presumably is ultimately the accretion of matter onto the supermassive black hole, the SE-emitting region must be receiving the majority of this energy. In addition, the source does not follow the typical diskâcorona relation found in AGNs, neither in the initial flare (from 2017 to 2019) nor in the current bright soft state (2022â2023). We found that the core (<1 pc) radio emission at 5 GHz gradually increased until 2022 March, but showed a dip in 2022 August. The GĂŒdelâBenz relation ( L _radio / L _X-ray ⌠10 ^â5 ), however, is still within the expected range for radio-quiet AGNs, and further follow-up radio observations are currently being undertaken
The Quest for Dual and Binary Supermassive Black Holes: A Multi-Messenger View
The quest for binary and dual supermassive black holes (SMBHs) at the dawn of the multi-messenger era is compelling. Detecting dual active galactic nuclei (AGN) â active SMBHs at projected separations larger than several parsecs â and binary AGN â probing the scale where SMBHs are bound in a Keplerian binary â is an observational challenge. The study of AGN pairs (either dual or binary) also represents an overarching theoretical problem in cosmology and astrophysics. The AGN triggering calls for detailed knowledge of the hydrodynamical conditions of gas in the imminent surroundings of the SMBHs and, at the same time, their duality calls for detailed knowledge on how galaxies assemble through major and minor mergers and grow fed by matter along the filaments of the cosmic web. This review describes the techniques used across the electromagnetic spectrum to detect dual and binary AGN candidates and proposes new avenues for their search. The current observational status is compared with the state-of-the-art numerical simulations and models for formation of dual and binary AGN. Binary SMBHs are among the loudest sources of gravitational waves (GWs) in the Universe. The search for a background of GWs at nHz frequencies from inspiralling SMBHs at low redshifts, and the direct detection of signals from their coalescence by the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna in the next decade, make this a theme of major interest for multi-messenger astrophysics. This review discusses the future facilities and observational strategies that are likely to significantly advance this fascinating field
Astronomical Distance Determination in the Space Age: Secondary Distance Indicators
The formal division of the distance indicators into primary and secondary leads to difficulties in description of methods which can actually be used in two ways: with, and without the support of the other methods for scaling. Thus instead of concentrating on the scaling requirement we concentrate on all methods of distance determination to extragalactic sources which are designated, at least formally, to use for individual sources. Among those, the Supernovae Ia is clearly the leader due to its enormous success in determination of the expansion rate of the Universe. However, new methods are rapidly developing, and there is also a progress in more traditional methods. We give a general overview of the methods but we mostly concentrate on the most recent developments in each field, and future expectations. © 2018, The Author(s)