721 research outputs found
The Spitzer discovery of a galaxy with infrared emission solely due to AGN activity
We present a galaxy (SAGE1CJ053634.78-722658.5) at a redshift of 0.14 of
which the IR is entirely dominated by emission associated with the AGN. We
present the 5-37 um Spitzer/IRS spectrum and broad wavelength SED of
SAGE1CJ053634, an IR point-source detected by Spitzer/SAGE (Meixner et al
2006). The source was observed in the SAGE-Spec program (Kemper et al., 2010)
and was included to determine the nature of sources with deviant IR colours.
The spectrum shows a redshifted (z=0.14+-0.005) silicate emission feature with
an exceptionally high feature-to-continuum ratio and weak polycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbon (PAH) bands. We compare the source with models of emission from
dusty tori around AGNs from Nenkova et al. (2008). We present a diagnostic
diagram that will help to identify similar sources based on Spitzer/MIPS and
Herschel/PACS photometry. The SED of SAGE1CJ053634 is peculiar because it lacks
far-IR emission and a clear stellar counterpart. We find that the SED and the
IR spectrum can be understood as emission originating from the inner ~10 pc
around an accreting black hole. There is no need to invoke emission from the
host galaxy, either from the stars or from the interstellar medium, although a
possible early-type host galaxy cannot be excluded based on the SED analysis.
The hot dust around the accretion disk gives rise to a continuum, which peaks
at 4 um, whereas the strong silicate features may arise from optically thin
emission of dusty clouds within ~10 pc around the black hole. The weak PAH
emission does not appear to be linked to star formation, as star formation
templates strongly over-predict the measured far-IR flux levels. The SED of
SAGE1CJ053634 is rare in the local universe but may be more common in the more
distant universe. The conspicuous absence of host-galaxy IR emission places
limits on the far-IR emission arising from the dusty torus alone.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A, 7 pages, 6 figure
Physical activity attitudes, intentions and behaviour among 18-25 year olds: a mixed method study
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Detection of optical coronal emission from 10^6 K gas in the core of the Centaurus cluster
We report a detection (3.5x10^37 \pm 5.6x10^36 ergps) of the optical coronal
emission line [Fe X]6374 and upper limits of four other coronal lines using
high resolution VIMOS spectra centred on NGC 4696, the brightest cluster galaxy
in the Centaurus cluster. Emission from these lines is indicative of gas at
temperatures between 1 and 5 million K so traces the interstellar gas in NGC
4696. The rate of cooling derived from the upper limits is consistent with the
cooling rate from X-ray observations (~10 solar masses per year) however we
detect twice the luminosity expected for [Fe X]6374 emission, at 1 million K,
our lowest temperature probe. We suggest this emission is due to the gas being
heated rather than cooling out of the intracluster medium. We detect no coronal
lines from [Ca XV], which are expected from the 5 million K gas seen near the
centre in X-rays with Chandra. Calcium is however likely to be depleted from
the gas phase onto dust grains in the central regions of NGC 4696.Comment: 11 pages, 13 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA
PACS Evolutionary Probe (PEP) - A Herschel Key Program
Deep far-infrared photometric surveys studying galaxy evolution and the
nature of the cosmic infrared background are a key strength of the Herschel
mission. We describe the scientific motivation for the PACS Evolutionary Probe
(PEP) guaranteed time key program and its role in the complement of Herschel
surveys, and the field selection which includes popular multiwavelength fields
such as GOODS, COSMOS, Lockman Hole, ECDFS, EGS. We provide an account of the
observing strategies and data reduction methods used. An overview of first
science results illustrates the potential of PEP in providing calorimetric star
formation rates for high redshift galaxy populations, thus testing and
superseeding previous extrapolations from other wavelengths, and enabling a
wide range of galaxy evolution studies.Comment: 13 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in A&
The Quasar Feedback Survey: characterising CO excitation in quasar host galaxies
We present a comprehensive study of the molecular gas properties of 17 Type 2
quasars at 10^{42.1}\rm ergs^{-1}_{up}r_{21}_{21}_{CO(2-1)}_{CO(1-0)}r_{21}r_{21}\sim_{21}\simr_{21} values, for the 7
targets with the required data we find low excitation in CO(6-5) & CO(7-6)
(r_{61}r_{62}$ < 0.6 in all but one target), unlike high redshift
quasars in the literature, which are far more luminous and show higher line
ratios. The ionised gas traced by [OIII] exhibit systematically higher
velocities than the molecular gas traced by CO. We conclude that any effects of
quasar feedback (e.g. via outflows and radio jets) do not have a significant
instantaneous impact on the global molecular gas content and excitation and we
suggest that it only occurs on more localised scales.Comment: 32 pages (20 in the main body of the paper and 12 in the appendix),
28 figures (10 in main body of paper and 18 in appendix) Accepted for
publication in MNRAS. Data available at
https://doi.org/10.25405/data.ncl.2431250
GOODS-Herschel: star formation, dust attenuation, and the FIR-radio correlation on the main sequence of star-forming galaxies up to z=4
We use deep panchromatic data sets in the GOODS-N field, from GALEX to the deepest Herschel far-infrared (FIR) and VLA radio continuum imaging, to explore the evolution of star-formation activity and dust attenuation properties of star-forming galaxies to z sime 4, using mass-complete samples. Our main results can be summarized as follows: (i) the slope of the star-formation rateâM* correlation is consistent with being constant sime0.8 up to z sime 1.5, while its normalization keeps increasing with redshift; (ii) for the first time we are able to explore the FIRâradio correlation for a mass-selected sample of star-forming galaxies: the correlation does not evolve up to z sime 4; (iii) we confirm that galaxy stellar mass is a robust proxy for UV dust attenuation in star-forming galaxies, with more massive galaxies being more dust attenuated. Strikingly, we find that this attenuation relation evolves very weakly with redshift, with the amount of dust attenuation increasing by less than 0.3 mag over the redshift range [0.5â4] for a fixed stellar mass; (iv) the correlation between dust attenuation and the UV spectral slope evolves with redshift, with the median UV slope becoming bluer with redshift. By z sime 3, typical UV slopes are inconsistent, given the measured dust attenuations, with the predictions of commonly used empirical laws. (v) Finally, building on existing results, we show that gas reddening is marginally larger (by a factor of around 1.3) than the stellar reddening at all redshifts probed. Our results support a scenario where the ISM conditions of typical star-forming galaxies evolve with redshift, such that at z â„ 1.5 Main Sequence galaxies have ISM conditions moving closer to those of local starbursts
The galaxyâs gas content regulated by the dark matter halo mass results in a superlinear M BHâM â Relation
Supermassive black holes (SMBHs) are tightly correlated with their hosts, but the origin of such connection remains elusive. To explore the cosmic buildup of this scaling relation, we present an empirically motivated model that tracks galaxy and SMBH growth down to z = 0. Starting from a random mass seed distribution at z = 10, we assume that each galaxy evolves on the star-forming "main sequence" (MS) and each BH follows the recently derived stellar mass (M sstarf) dependent ratio between BH accretion rate and star formation rate, going as . Our simple recipe naturally describes the BHâgalaxy buildup in two stages. At first, the SMBH lags behind the host that evolves along the MS. Later, as the galaxy grows in M sstarf, our M sstarf-dependent BHAR/SFR induces a superlinear BH growth, as . According to this formalism, smaller BH seeds increase their relative mass faster and earlier than bigger BH seeds, at fixed M sstarf, thus setting along a gradually tighter M BHâM sstarf locus toward higher M sstarf. Assuming reasonable values of the radiative efficiency epsilon ~ 0.1, our empirical trend agrees with both high-redshift model predictions and intrinsic M BHâM sstarf relations of local BHs. We speculate that the observed nonlinear BHâgalaxy buildup is reflected in a twofold behavior with dark matter halo mass (M DM), displaying a clear turnover at M DM ~ 2 Ă 1012 M â. While supernovae-driven feedback suppresses BH growth in smaller halos (), above the M DM threshold cold gas inflows possibly fuel both BH accretion and star formation in a similar fashion ()
The Quasar Feedback Survey: characterizing CO excitation in quasar host galaxies
\ua9 2023 The Author(s). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Royal Astronomical Society.We present a comprehensive study of the molecular gas properties of 17 Type 2 quasars at z < 0.2 from the Quasar Feedback Survey (L > 1042.1), selected by their high [O iii] luminosities and displaying a large diversity of radio jet properties, but dominated by LIRG-like galaxies. With these data, we are able to investigate the impact of AGN and AGN feedback mechanisms on the global molecular interstellar medium. Using Atacama Pathfinder EXperiment and ALMA ACA observations, we measure the total molecular gas content using the CO(1-0) emission and homogeneously sample the carbon monoxide (CO) spectral line energy distributions, observing CO transitions (Jup = 1, 2, 3, 6, 7). We observe high r21 ratios (r21 = L\u27CO(2-1)/L\u27CO(1-0)) with a median r21 = 1.06, similar to local (U)LIRGs (with r21 âŒ1) and higher than normal star-forming galaxies (with r21 âŒ0.65). Despite the high r21 values, for the seven targets with the required data, we find low excitation in CO(6-5) & CO(7-6) (r61 and r62 < 0.6 in all but one target), unlike high-redshift quasars in the literature, which are far more luminous and show higher line ratios. The ionized gas traced by [O iii] exhibits systematically higher velocities than the molecular gas traced by CO. We conclude that any effects of quasar feedback (e.g. via outflows and radio jets) do not have a significant instantaneous impact on the global molecular gas content and excitation and we suggest that it only occurs on more localized scales
Herschel FIR counterparts of selected Ly-alpha emitters at z~2.2. Fast evolution since z~3 or missed obscured AGNs?
Ly-alpha emitters (LAEs) are seen everywhere in the redshift domain from
local to z~7. Far-infrared (FIR) counterparts of LAEs at different epochs could
provide direct clues on dust content, extinction, and spectral energy
distribution (SED) for these galaxies. We search for FIR counterparts of LAEs
that are optically detected in the GOODS-North field at redshift z~2.2 using
data from the Herschel Space Telescope with the Photodetector Array Camera and
Spectrometer (PACS). The LAE candidates were isolated via color-magnitude
diagram using the medium-band photometry from the ALHAMBRA Survey, ancillary
data on GOODS-North, and stellar population models. According to the fitting of
these spectral synthesis models and FIR/optical diagnostics, most of them seem
to be obscured galaxies whose spectra are AGN-dominated. From the analysis of
the optical data, we have observed a fraction of AGN or composite over source
total number of ~0.75 in the LAE population at z~2.2, which is marginally
consistent with the fraction previously observed at z=2.25 and even at low
redshift (0.2<z<0.45), but significantly different from the one observed at
redshift ~3, which could be compatible either with a scenario of rapid change
in the AGN fraction between the epochs involved or with a non detection of
obscured AGN in other z=2-3 LAE samples due to lack of deep FIR observations.
We found three robust FIR (PACS) counterparts at z~2.2 in GOODS-North. This
demonstrates the possibility of finding dust emission in LAEs even at higher
redshifts.Comment: 11 pages (including Appendices), 6 figures. Accepted for publication
in Astronomy & Astrophysics Letters (two references added
Attenuation proxy hidden in surface brightness-colour diagrams. A new strategy for the LSST era
Large future sky surveys, such as the LSST, will provide optical photometry
for billions of objects. This paper aims to construct a proxy for the far
ultraviolet attenuation (AFUVp) from the optical data alone, enabling the rapid
estimation of the star formation rate (SFR) for galaxies that lack UV or IR
data. To mimic LSST observations, we use the deep panchromatic optical coverage
of the SDSS Photometric Catalogue DR~12, complemented by the estimated physical
properties for the SDSS galaxies from the GALEX-SDSS-WISE Legacy Catalog
(GSWLC) and inclination information obtained from the SDSS DR7. We restricted
our sample to the 0.025-0.1 z-spec range and investigated relations among
surface brightness, colours, and dust attenuation in the far UV range for
star-forming galaxies obtained from the spectral energy distribution (SED).
{Dust attenuation is best correlated with (u-r) colour and the surface
brightness in the u band (). We provide a dust attenuation proxy
for galaxies on the star-forming main sequence, which can be used for the LSST
or any other type of broadband optical survey. The mean ratio between the
catalogue values of SFR and those estimated using optical-only SDSS data with
the AFUVp prior calculated as SFR=log(SFR_{\tiny{\mbox{this
work}}}/SFR) is found to be less than 0.1~dex, while
runs without priors result in an SFR overestimation larger than 0.3~dex. The
presence or absence of theAFUVp has a negligible influence on the stellar mass
estimation (with M in the range from 0 to dex).
Forthcoming deep optical observations of the LSST Deep Drilling Fields, which
also have multi-wavelength data, will enable one to calibrate the obtained
relation for higher redshift galaxies and, possibly, extend the study towards
other types of galaxies, such as early-type galaxies off the main sequence.Comment: 18 pages, accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysic
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