1,758 research outputs found

    The Frequency and Radio Properties of Broad Absorption Line Quasars

    Get PDF
    A sample of 67 Broad Absorption Line quasars (BALQSOs) from the Large Bright Quasar Survey (LBQS) is used to estimate the observed and intrinsic fraction of BAL quasars in optically--selected samples at intermediate (B_J \simeq 18.5) magnitudes. The observed BALQSO fraction in the redshift range 1.5 < z < 3.0 is 15\pm3%. A well--determined, empirical, k--correction, to allow for the differences in the spectral energy distributions of non--BALQSOs and BALQSOs shortward of \simeq 2100A in the restframe, is applied to the sample. The result is an estimate of the intrinsic fraction of BALQSOs, in the redshift range 1.5 < z < 3.0, of 22+/-4%. This value is twice that commonly cited for the occurrence of BALQSOs in optically--selected samples and the figure is in reasonable agreement with that from a preliminary analysis of the SDSS Early Data Release. The fraction of BALQSOs predicted to be present in an optical survey with flux limits equivalent to that of the FIRST Bright Quasar Survey (FBQS) is shown to be \simeq 20%. The BALQSO fractions derived from the FBQS and the LBQS suggest that optically--bright BALQSOs are half as likely as non-BALQSOs to be detectable as S_1.4GHz > 1mJy radio sources.Comment: Accepted for publication in AJ, April 2003 Issu

    Large-Scale Structure at z~2.5

    Full text link
    We have made a statistically complete, unbiased survey of C IV systems toward a region of high QSO density near the South Galactic Pole using 25 lines of sight spanning 1.5<z<2.81.5<z<2.8. Such a survey makes an excellent probe of large-scale structure at early epochs. We find evidence for structure on the 1535h115-35h^{-1} proper Mpc scale (H0100H_0 \equiv 100 km s1s^{-1} Mpc1{-1}) as determined by the two point C IV - C IV absorber correlation function, and reject the null hypothesis that C IV systems are distributed randomly on such scales at the 3.5σ\sim 3.5\sigma level. The structure likely reflects the distance between two groups of absorbers subtending  13×5×21h3\sim~ 13 \times 5 \times 21h^{-3} and 7×1×15h3\sim 7 \times 1 \times 15h^{-3} Mpc3^3 at z2.3z\sim 2.3 and z2.5z \sim 2.5 respectively. There is also a marginal trend for the association of high rest equivalent width C IV absorbers and QSOs at similar redshifts but along different lines of sight. The total number of C IV systems detected is consistent with that which would be expected based on a survey using many widely separated lines of sight. Using the same data, we also find 11 Mg II absorbers in a complete survey toward 24 lines of sight; there is no evidence for Mg II - Mg II or Mg II - QSO clustering, though the sample size is likely still small to detect such structure if it exists.Comment: 56 pages including 32 of figures, in gzip-ed uuencoded postscript format, 1 long table not included, aastex4 package. Accepted for publication in ApJ Supplement

    BOOK REVIEW ISLAM AND ECOLOGY: A BESTOWED TRUST

    Get PDF
    The themes of this hefty tome, consisting of twenty-three essays, preceded by prefaces and introductions, are closely connected with the May 1998 conference on Islam and ecology, which was held in the framework of a series of gatherings on the stance of the world’s religious traditions towards today’s environmental crisis, hosted by the Center for the Study of World Religions at Harvard University between 1996 and 1998. The editors of this volume must be credited with giving the contributors opportunity to present the most up-to-date essays, which must have been quite a strain on the editing process of an ambitious project like this

    Civic Chorale

    Get PDF
    Center for the Performing Arts Concert Hall November 14, 2017 8:00 p.m

    Fabrication and characterization of silver- and copper-coated Nylon 6 forcespun nanofibers by thermal evaporation

    Get PDF
    Silver and copper nanoparticles were deposited as thin films onto substrates consisting of Nylon 6 nanofibers manufactured using forcespinningR equipment. Different rotational speeds were used to obtain continuous nanofibers of various diameters arranged as nonwoven mats. The Nylon 6 nanofibers were collected as successive layers on frames, and a high-vacuum thermal evaporation method was used to deposit the silver and copper thin films on the nanofibers. The structures were investigated using scanning electron microscopy–scanning transmission electron microscopy, atomic force microscopy, x-ray diffraction, and electrical resistance measurements. The results indicate that evaporated silver and copper nanoparticles were successfully deposited on Nylon 6 nanofibers as thin films that adhered well to the polymer substrate while the native morphology of the nanofibers were preserved, and electrically conductive nanostructures were achieved

    Diurnal variation of the tropospheric energy balance

    Get PDF
    November 1976.Includes bibliographical references.Sponsored by NSF OCD 75-01424.Suggested physical mechanism for diurnal cycle of required warming / W. M. Gray

    The FIRST Bright Quasar Survey. II. 60 Nights and 1200 Spectra Later

    Full text link
    We have used the VLA FIRST survey and the APM catalog of the POSS-I plates as the basis for constructing a new radio-selected sample of optically bright quasars. This is the first radio-selected sample that is competitive in size with current optically selected quasar surveys. Using only two basic criteria, radio-optical positional coincidence and optical morphology, quasars and BL Lacs can be identified with 60% selection efficiency; the efficiency increases to 70% for objects fainter than magnitude 17. We show that a more sophisticated selection scheme can predict with better than 85% reliability which candidates will turn out to be quasars. This paper presents the second installment of the FIRST Bright Quasar Survey with a catalog of 636 quasars distributed over 2682 square degrees. The quasar sample is characterized and all spectra are displayed. The FBQS detects both radio-loud and radio-quiet quasars out to a redshift z>3. We find a large population of objects of intermediate radio-loudness; there is no evidence in our sample for a bimodal distribution of radio characteristics. The sample includes ~29 broad absorption line quasars, both high and low ionization, and a number of new objects with remarkable optical spectra.Comment: 41 pages plus 39 gifs which contain all quasar spectra. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal Supplement Serie

    H-beta Line Width and the UV-X-ray Spectra of Luminous AGN

    Full text link
    The width of the broad H-beta emission line is the primary defining characteristic of the NLS1 class. This parameter is also an important component of Boroson and Green's optical Eigenvector 1 (EV1), which links steeper soft X-ray spectra with narrower H-beta emission, stronger H-beta blue wing, stronger optical Fe II emission, and weaker [O III] lambda 5007. Potentially, EV1 represents a fundamental physical process linking the dynamics of fueling and outflow with the accretion rate. We attempted to understand these relationships by extending the optical spectra into the UV for a sample of 22 QSOs with high quality soft-X-ray spectra, and discovered a whole new set of UV relationships that suggest that high accretion rates are linked to dense gas and perhaps nuclear starbursts. While it has been argued that narrow (BLR) H-beta means low Black Hole mass in luminous NLS1s, the C IV, lambda 1549 and Ly alpha emission lines are broader, perhaps the result of outflows driven by their high Eddington accretion rates. We present some new trends of optical-UV with X-ray spectral energy distributions. Steeper X-ray spectra appear associated with stronger UV relative to optical continua, but the presence of strong UV absorption lines is associated with depressed soft X-rays and redder optical-UV continua.Comment: Invited talk presented at the Joint MPE,AIP,ESO workshop on NLS1s, Bad Honnef, Dec. 1999, to appear in New Astronomy Reviews; also available at http://wave.xray.mpe.mpg.de/conferences/nls1-worksho
    corecore