11 research outputs found
Deep Herschel observations of the 2 Jy sample: assessing the non-thermal and AGN contributions to the far-IR continuum
The far-IR/sub-mm wavelength range contains a wealth of diagnostic information that is important for understanding the role of active galactic nuclei (AGN) in galaxy evolution. Here we present the results of Herschel PACS and SPIRE observations of a complete sample of 46 powerful 2 Jy radio AGN at intermediate redshifts (0.05 200 μm) sampled by the SPIRE instrument. Non-thermal contamination is strongest in objects with compact CSS/GPS or extended FRI radio morphologies, and in those with type 1 optical spectra. Considering thermal dust emission, we find strong correlations between the 100 and 160 μm monochromatic luminosities and AGN power indicators, providing further evidence that radiation from the AGN may be an important heating source for the far-IR emitting dust. Clearly, AGN contamination – whether by the direct emission from synchrotron-emitting lobes and cores, or via radiative heating of the cool dust – needs to be carefully considered when using the far-IR continuum to measure the star formation rates in the host galaxies of radio AGN
Metal enrichment processes
There are many processes that can transport gas from the galaxies to their
environment and enrich the environment in this way with metals. These metal
enrichment processes have a large influence on the evolution of both the
galaxies and their environment. Various processes can contribute to the gas
transfer: ram-pressure stripping, galactic winds, AGN outflows, galaxy-galaxy
interactions and others. We review their observational evidence, corresponding
simulations, their efficiencies, and their time scales as far as they are known
to date. It seems that all processes can contribute to the enrichment. There is
not a single process that always dominates the enrichment, because the
efficiencies of the processes vary strongly with galaxy and environmental
properties.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Space Science
Reviews, special issue "Clusters of galaxies: beyond the thermal view",
Editor J.S. Kaastra, Chapter 17; work done by an international team at the
International Space Science Institute (ISSI), Bern, organised by J.S.
Kaastra, A.M. Bykov, S. Schindler & J.A.M. Bleeke
Searching for evidence of energetic feedback in distant galaxies: a galaxy wide outflow in a z ~ 2 ultraluminous infrared galaxy
Leading models of galaxy formation require large-scale energetic outflows to
regulate the growth of distant galaxies and their central black holes. However,
current observational support for this hypothesis at high redshift is mostly
limited to rare z>2 radio galaxies. Here we present Gemini-North NIFS Intregral
Field Unit (IFU) observations of the [OIII] emission from a z~2 ultraluminous
infrared galaxy (L_IR>10^12 solar luminosities) with an optically identified
Active Galactic Nucleus (AGN). The spatial extent (~4-8 kpc) of the high
velocity and broad [OIII] emission are consistent with that found in z>2 radio
galaxies, indicating the presence of a large-scale energetic outflow in a
galaxy population potentially orders of magnitude more common than distant
radio galaxies. The low radio luminosity of this system indicates that
radio-bright jets are unlikely to be responsible for driving the outflow.
However, the estimated energy input required to produce the large-scale outflow
signatures (of order ~10^59 ergs over ~30 Myrs) could be delivered by a wind
radiatively driven by the AGN and/or supernovae winds from intense star
formation. The energy injection required to drive the outflow is comparable to
the estimated binding energy of the galaxy spheroid, suggesting that it can
have a significant impact on the evolution of the galaxy. We argue that the
outflow observed in this system is likely to be comparatively typical of the
high-redshift ULIRG population and discuss the implications of these
observations for galaxy formation models.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, 1 table. MNRAS in press (no further changes
required after resubmission
Resolving the Optical Emission Lines of Ly Blob ``B1'' at z = 2.38: Another Hidden Quasar
We have used the SINFONI near-infrared integral field unit on the Very Large Telescope to resolve the optical emission line structure of one of the brightest (L Lyα ≈ 1044 erg s–1) and nearest (z ≈ 2.38) of all Lyα blobs (LABs). The target, known in the literature as object "B1", lies at a redshift where the main optical emission lines are accessible in the observed near-infrared. We detect luminous [O III] λλ4959, 5007 and Hα emission with a spatial extent of at least 32 × 40 kpc (4'' × 5''). The dominant optical emission line component shows relatively broad lines (600-800 km s–1, FWHM) and line ratios consistent with active galactic nucleus (AGN) photoionization. The new evidence for AGN photoionization, combined with previously detected C IV and luminous, warm infrared emission, suggest that B1 is the site of a hidden quasar. This is confirmed by the fact that [O II] is relatively weak compared with [O III] (extinction-corrected [O III]/[O II] of about 3.8), which is indicative of a high, Seyfert-like ionization parameter. From the extinction-corrected [O III] luminosity we infer a bolometric AGN luminosity of ~3 × 1046 erg s–1, and further conclude that the obscured AGN may be Compton-thick given existing X-ray limits. The large line widths observed are consistent with clouds moving within the narrow-line region of a luminous QSO. The AGN scenario is capable of producing sufficient ionizing photons to power the Lyα, even in the presence of dust. By performing a census of similar objects in the literature, we find that virtually all luminous LABs harbor obscured quasars. Based on simple duty-cycle arguments, we conclude that AGNs are the main drivers of the Lyα in LABs rather than the gravitational heating and subsequent cooling suggested by cold stream models. We also conclude that the empirical relation between LABs and overdense environments at high redshift must be due to a more fundamental correlation between AGNs (or massive galaxies) and environment
Planck's dusty GEMS III. A massive lensing galaxy with a bottom-heavy stellar initial mass function at z = 1.5
We study the properties of the foreground galaxy of the Ruby, the brightest
gravitationally lensed high-redshift galaxy on the sub-millimeter sky as probed
by the Planck satellite, and part of our sample of Planck's Dusty GEMS. The
Ruby consists of an Einstein ring of 1.4" diameter at z = 3.005 observed with
ALMA at 0.1" resolution, centered on a faint, red, massive lensing galaxy seen
with HST/WFC3, which itself has an exceptionally high redshift, z = 1.525
0.001, as confirmed with VLT/X-Shooter spectroscopy. Here we focus on the
properties of the lens and the lensing model obtained with LENSTOOL. The
rest-frame optical morphology of this system is strongly dominated by the lens,
while the Ruby itself is highly obscured, and contributes less than 10% to the
photometry out to the K band. The foreground galaxy has a lensing mass of (3.70
0.35) 10 M. Magnification factors are between 7
and 38 for individual clumps forming two image families along the Einstein
ring. We present a decomposition of the foreground and background sources in
the WFC3 images, and stellar population synthesis modeling with a range of
star-formation histories for Chabrier and Salpeter initial mass functions
(IMFs). Only the stellar mass range obtained with the latter agrees well with
the lensing mass. This is consistent with the bottom-heavy IMFs of massive
high-redshift galaxies expected from detailed studies of the stellar masses and
mass profiles of their low-redshift descendants, and from models of turbulent
gas fragmentation. This may be the first direct constraint on the IMF in a lens
at z = 1.5, which is not a cluster central galaxy.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Energetic galaxy-wide outflows in high-redshift ultraluminous infrared galaxies hosting AGN activity
We present integral field spectroscopy observations, covering the [O
III]4959,5007 emission-line doublet of eight high-redshift (z=1.4-3.4)
ultra-luminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs) that host Active Galactic Nuclei
(AGN) activity, including known sub-millimetre luminous galaxies (SMGs). The
targets have moderate radio luminosities that are typical of high-redshift
ULIRGs (L(1.4GHz)=10^(24)-10^(25)W/Hz) and therefore are not radio-loud AGN. We
de-couple kinematic components due to the galaxy dynamics and mergers from
those due to outflows. We find evidence in the four most luminous systems (L([O
III])>~10^(43)erg/s) for the signatures of large-scale energetic outflows:
extremely broad [O III] emission (FWHM ~ 700-1400km/s) across ~4-15kpc, with
high velocity offsets from the systemic redshifts (up to ~850km/s). The four
less luminous systems have lower quality data displaying weaker evidence for
spatially extended outflows. We estimate that these outflows are potentially
depositing energy into their host galaxies at considerable rates
(~10^(43)-10^(45)erg/s); however, due to the lack of constraints on the density
of the outflowing material and the structure of the outflow, these estimates
should be taken as illustrative only. Based on the measured maximum velocities
(v(max)~400-1400km/s) the outflows observed are likely to unbind some fraction
of the gas from their host galaxies, but are unlikely to completely remove gas
from the galaxy haloes. By using a combination of energetic arguments and a
comparison to ULIRGs without clear evidence for AGN activity, we show that the
AGN activity could be the dominant power source for driving all of the observed
outflows, although star formation may also play a significant role in some of
the sources.Comment: 25 pages, 11 figures, accepted by MNRA
Gas-rich mergers and feedback are ubiquitous amongst starbursting radio galaxies, as revealed by the VLA, IRAM PdBI and Herschel
We report new, sensitive observations of two z ˜ 3-3.5 far-infrared-luminous radio galaxies, 6C 1909+72 and B3 J2330+3927, in the 12CO J = 1-0 transition with the Karl Jansky Very Large Array and at 100-500 m using Herschel, alongside new and archival 12CO J = 4-3 observations from the Plateau de Bure Interferometer. We introduce a new colour-colour diagnostic plot to constrain the redshifts of several distant, dusty galaxies in our target fields. A bright SMG near 6C 1909+72 likely shares the same node or filament as the signpost active galactic nuclei (AGN), but it is not detected in 12CO despite ˜20 000 km s-1 of velocity coverage. Also in the 6C 1909+72 field, a large, red dust feature spanning ≈500 kpc is aligned with the radio jet. We suggest several processes by which metal-rich material may have been transported, favouring a collimated outflow reminiscent of the jet-oriented metal enrichment seen in local cluster environments. Our interferometric imaging reveals a gas-rich companion to B3 J2330+3927; indeed, all bar one of the eight z ≳ 2 radio galaxies (or companions) detected in 12CO provide some evidence that starburst activity in radio-loud AGN at high redshift is driven by the interaction of two or more gas-rich systems in which a significant mass of stars has already formed, rather than via steady accretion of cold gas from the cosmic web. We find that the 12CO brightness temperature ratios in radio-loud AGN host galaxies are significantly higher than those seen in similarly intense starbursts where AGN activity is less pronounced. Our most extreme example, where L CO 4-3'/L CO 1-0'>2.7, provides evidence that significant energy is being deposited rapidly into the molecular gas via X-rays and/or mechanical ('quasar-mode') feedback from the AGN, leading to a high degree of turbulence globally and a low optical depth in 12CO - feedback that may lead to the cessation of star formation on a time-scale commensurate with that of the jet activity, ≲10 Myr
Cold gas dynamics in Hydra-A: evidence for a rotating disc
We present multifrequency observations of the radio galaxy Hydra-A (3C218) located in the core of a massive, X-ray luminous galaxy cluster. Integral field unit spectroscopy is used to trace the kinematics of the ionized and warm molecular hydrogen which are consistent with an ∼5 kpc rotating disc. Broad, double-peaked lines of CO(2–1), [C II] 157 μm and [O I] 63 μm are detected. We estimate the mass of the cold gas within the disc to be Mgas = 2.3 ± 0.3 × 109 M⊙. These observations demonstrate that the complex line profiles found in the cold atomic and molecular gas are related to the rotating disc or ring of gas. Finally, a Hubble Space Telescope image of the galaxy shows that this gas disc contains a substantial mass of dust. The large gas mass, star formation rate and kinematics are consistent with the levels of gas cooling from the intracluster medium (ICM). We conclude that the cold gas originates from the continual quiescent accumulation of cooled ICM gas. The rotation is in a plane perpendicular to the projected orientation of the radio jets and ICM cavities hinting at a possible connection between the kpc-scale cooling gas and the accretion of material on to the black hole. We discuss the implications of these observations for models of cold accretion, AGN feedback and cooling flows
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First Results from the JWST Early Release Science Program Q3D: Powerful Quasar-driven Galactic Scale Outflow at z = 3
Quasar-driven galactic outflows are a major driver of the evolution of massive galaxies. We report observations of a powerful galactic-scale outflow in a z = 3 extremely red and intrinsically luminous (L bol ≃ 5 × 1047erg s−1) quasar SDSSJ1652 + 1728 with the Near-infrared Spectrograph on board JWST. We analyze the kinematics of rest-frame optical emission lines and identify the quasar-driven outflow extending out to ∼10 kpc from the quasar with a velocity offset of (v r = ± 500 km s−1) and high velocity dispersion (FWHM = 700-2400 km s−1). Due to JWST’s unprecedented surface brightness sensitivity in the near-infrared, we unambiguously show that the powerful high velocity outflow in an extremely red quasar encompasses a large swath of the host galaxy’s interstellar medium. Using the kinematics and dynamics of optical emission lines, we estimate the mass outflow rate—in the warm ionized phase alone—to be at least 2300 ± 1400 M ⊙ yr−1. We measure a momentum flux ratio between the outflow and the quasar accretion disk of ∼1 on a kpc scale, indicating that the outflow was likely driven in a relatively high (>1023cm−2) column density environment through radiation pressure on dust grains. We find a coupling efficiency between the bolometric luminosity of the quasar and the outflow of 0.1%, matching the theoretical prediction of the minimum coupling efficiency necessary for negative quasar feedback. The outflow has sufficient energetics to drive the observed turbulence seen in shocked regions of the quasar host galaxy, which are likely directly responsible for prolonging the time that it takes for gas to cool efficiently. © 2024. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society.Open access journalThis item from the UA Faculty Publications collection is made available by the University of Arizona with support from the University of Arizona Libraries. If you have questions, please contact us at [email protected]