1,082 research outputs found
A Simple Measurement of Turbulence in Cores of Galaxy Clusters
Using a simple model, we study the effects of turbulence on the motion of
bubbles produced by AGN jet activities in the core of a galaxy cluster. We
focus on the turbulence with scales larger then the size of the bubbles. We
show that for a bubble pair with an age of ~10^8 yr, the projected angle
between the two vectors from the cluster center to the two bubbles should be ~>
90 degree and the ratio of their projected distances from the cluster center
should be ~< 2.5, if the velocity and scale of the turbulence are ~250 km s^-1
and ~20 kpc, respectively. The positions of the bubbles observed in the Perseus
cluster suggest that the turbulent velocity is ~>100 km s^-1 for the cluster.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ
Energy-Dependent Harmonic Ratios of the Cyclotron Features of X0331+53 in the 2004-2005 Outburst
We report on changes of the cyclotron resonance energies of the recurrent
transient pulsar, X0331+53 (V0332+53). The whole RXTE data acquired in the
2004-2005 outburst were utilized. The 3-80 keV source luminosity varied between
1.7x10^36 and 3.5x10^38 ers/s, assuming a distance of 7 kpc. We confirmed that
the fundamental cyclotron resonance energy changed from ~22 to ~27 keV in a
clear anti-correlation to the source luminosity, and without any hysteresis
effects between the rising and declining phases of the outburst. In contrast,
the second harmonic energy changed from ~49 to ~54 keV, implying a weaker
fractional change as a function of the luminosity. As a result, the observed
resonance energy ratio between the second harmonic and the fundamental was ~2.2
when the source was most luminous, whereas the ratio decreased to the nominal
value of 2.0 at the least luminous state. Although the significance of this
effect is model dependent, these results suggest that the fundamental and
second harmonic resonances represent different heights in the accretion column,
depending on the mass accretion rate.Comment: 39 pages, 15 figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication in
Astrophysical Journa
ASCA PV observations of the Seyfert 2 galaxy NGC 4388: the obscured nucleus and its X-ray emission
We present results on the Seyfert 2 galaxy NGC4388 in the Virgo cluster
observed with ASCA during its PV phase. The 0.5-10 keV X-ray spectrum consists
of multiple components; (1) a continuum component heavily absorbed by a column
density NH = 4E23 cm-2 above 3 keV; (2) a strong 6.4 keV line (EW = 500 eV);
(3) a weak flat continuum between 1 and 3 keV; and (4) excess soft X-ray
emission below 1 keV. The detection of strong absorption for the hard X-ray
component is firm evidence for an obscured active nucleus in this Seyfert 2
galaxy. The absorption corrected X-ray luminosity is about 2E42 erg/s. This is
the first time that the fluorescent iron-K line has been detected in this
object. The flat spectrum in the intermediate energy range may be a scattered
continuum from the central source. The soft X-ray emission below 1 keV can be
thermal emission from a temperature kT = 0.5 keV, consistent with the spatially
extended emission observed by ROSAT HRI. However, the low abundance (0.05 Zs)
and high mass flow rate required for the thermal model and an iron-K line
stronger than expected from the obscuring torus model are puzzling. An
alternative consistent solution can be obtained if the central source was a
hundred times more luminous over than a thousand years ago. All the X-ray
emission below 3 keV is then scattered radiation.Comment: 9 pages, 5 Postscript figures, to be published in MNRA
Chandra Observation of M84, Radio Lobe Elliptical in Virgo cluster
We analyzed a deep Chandra observation of M84, a bright elliptical galaxy in
the core of the Virgo cluster. We find that the spatial distribution of the
soft X-ray emission is defined by the radio structure of the galaxy. In
particular we find two low density regions associated with the radio lobes and
surrounded by higher density X-ray filaments. In addition to a central AGN and
a population of galactic sources, we find a diffuse hard source filling the
central 10 kpc region. Since the morphology of the hard source appears round
and is different from that seen in the radio or in soft X-rays, we propose that
it is hot gas heated by the central AGN. Finally, we find that the central
elemental abundance in the X-ray gas is comparable to that measured optically.Comment: accepted to ApJ Letters, Oct 2000. 5 pages in emulateap
Is the black hole in GX 339-4 really spinning rapidly?
The wide-band Suzaku spectra of the black hole binary GX 339-4, acquired in
2007 February during the Very High state, were reanalyzed. Effects of event
pileup (significant within ~ 3' of the image center) and telemetry saturation
of the XIS data were carefully considered. The source was detected up to ~ 300$
keV, with an unabsorbed 0.5--200 keV luminosity of ~3.8 10^{38} erg/s at 8 kpc.
The spectrum can be approximated by a power-law of photon index 2.7, with a
mild soft excess and a hard X-ray hump. When using the XIS data outside 2' of
the image center, the Fe-K line appeared extremely broad, suggesting a high
black hole spin as already reported by Miller et al. (2008) based on the Suzaku
data and other CCD data. When the XIS data accumulation is further limited to
>3' to avoid event pileup, the Fe-K profile becomes narrower, and there appears
a marginally better solution that suggests the inner disk radius to be 5-14
times the gravitational radius (1-sigma), though a maximally spinning black
hole is still allowed by the data at the 90% confidence level. Consistently,
the optically-thick accretion disk is inferred to be truncated at a radius 5-32
times the gravitational radius. Thus, the Suzaku data allow an alternative
explanation without invoking a rapidly spinning black hole. This inference is
further supported by the disk radius measured previously in the High/Soft
state.Comment: 5 pages, figures, Suzaku results on GX 339-4, accepted to APJL. Nov.
11, 2009, accepted to ApJ
The Declined Activity in the Nucleus of NGC 1316
NGC 1316 (Fornax A) is a radio galaxy with prototypical double lobes, where
the magnetic field intensity is accurately measured via the inverse-Compton
technique. The radio-emitting electrons in the lobes are inferred to have a
synchrotron life time of 0.1 Gyr. Considering the lobe energetics, we estimate
the past nuclear X-ray luminosity of NGC 1316 to be at least 4 times 10^{34} W
(4 times 10^{41} erg s^{-1}). Thus, the nucleus was rather active at least 0.1
Gyr ago. In contrast, we confirmed with ASCA and ROSAT that the nucleus of NGC
1316 is very faint in X-rays at present, with the 2--10 keV luminosity of any
AGN-like hard component being < 2 times 10^{33} W (2 times 10^{40} erg s^{-1})
even assuming a nuclear obscuration up to 10^{28} m^{-2} (10^{24} cm^{-2}).
This is at least an order of magnitude lower than the estimated past activity,
indicating that the nucleus is presently very inactive. From these two results,
we conclude that the nucleus of NGC 1316 has become dormant during the last 0.1
Gyr. This suggests the possible abundance of ``dormant'' quasars in nearby
galaxies.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, to be published in the Astrophysical Journal
Letter
Excess Hard X-ray Emission from the Obscured Low Luminosity AGN In the Nearby Galaxy M 51 (NGC 5194)
We observed the nearby galaxy M~51 (NGC 5194) with BeppoSAX. The X-ray
properties of the nucleus below 10 keV are almost the same as the ASCA results
regarding the hard component and the neutral Fe K line, but the
intensity is about half of the ASCA 1993 data. Beyond this, in the BeppoSAX PDS
data, we detected a bright hard X-ray emission component which dominates above
10 keV. The 10 -- 100 keV flux and luminosity of this component are
respectively erg s cm and erg
s. These are about 10 times higher than the extrapolation from the soft
X-ray band, and similar to the flux observed with Ginga, which found a bright
power law component in 2 -- 20 keV band. Considering other wavelength
properties and the X-ray luminosity, together with strong neutral Fe K line,
the hard X-ray emission most likely arises from a low luminosity active
nucleus, which is obscured with a column density of cm.
This suggests that hidden low luminosity AGNs may well be present in other
nearby galaxies. We interpret the discrepancy between Ginga and other X-ray
satellites to be due to a large variability of absorption column density toward
the line of sight over several years, suggesting that the Compton thick
absorption material may be present on a spatial scale of a parsec. Apart from
the nucleus, several ultra-luminous off-nuclear X-ray sources detected in M~51
exhibit long-term time variability, suggesting the state transition similar to
that observed in Galactic black hole candidates.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures, accepted for A&
Strong Turbulence in the Cool Cores of Galaxy Clusters: Can Tsunamis Solve the Cooling Flow Problem?
Based on high-resolution two-dimensional hydrodynamic simulations, we show
that the bulk gas motions in a cluster of galaxies, which are naturally
expected during the process of hierarchical structure formation of the
universe, have a serous impact on the core. We found that the bulk gas motions
represented by acoustic-gravity waves create local but strong turbulence, which
reproduces the complicated X-ray structures recently observed in cluster cores.
Moreover, if the wave amplitude is large enough, they can suppress the
radiative cooling of the cores. Contrary to the previous studies, the heating
is operated by the turbulence, not weak shocks. The turbulence could be
detected in near-future space X-ray missions such as ASTRO-E2.Comment: Movies are available at http://th.nao.ac.jp/tsunami/index.ht
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