963 research outputs found
Radio faint AGN: a tale of two populations
We study the Extended Chandra Deep Field South (E-CDFS) Very Large Array
sample, which reaches a flux density limit at 1.4 GHz of 32.5 microJy at the
field centre and redshift ~ 4, and covers ~ 0.3 deg^2. Number counts are
presented for the whole sample while the evolutionary properties and luminosity
functions are derived for active galactic nuclei (AGN). The faint radio sky
contains two totally distinct AGN populations, characterised by very different
evolutions, luminosity functions, and Eddington ratios: radio-quiet
(RQ)/radiative-mode, and radio-loud/jet-mode AGN. The radio power of RQ AGN
evolves ~ (1+z)^2.5, similarly to star-forming galaxies, while the number
density of radio-loud ones has a peak at ~ 0.5 and then declines at higher
redshifts. The number density of radio-selected RQ AGN is consistent with that
of X-ray selected AGN, which shows that we are sampling the same population.
The unbiased fraction of radiative-mode RL AGN, derived from our own and
previously published data, is a strong function of radio power, decreasing from
~ 0.5 at P_1.4GHz ~ 10^24 W/Hz to ~ 0.04$ at P_1.4GHz ~ 10^22 W/Hz. Thanks to
our enlarged sample, which now includes ~ 700 radio sources, we also confirm
and strengthen our previous results on the source population of the faint radio
sky: star-forming galaxies start to dominate the radio sky only below ~ 0.1
mJy, which is also where radio-quiet AGN overtake radio-loud ones.Comment: 19 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
X-ray Variability Characteristics of the Seyfert 1 Galaxy NGC 3783
We have characterized the energy-dependent X-ray variability properties of
the Seyfert~1 galaxy NGC 3783 using archival XMM-Newton and Rossi X-ray Timing
Explorer data. The high-frequency fluctuation power spectral density function
(PSD) slope is consistent with flattening towards higher energies. Light curve
cross correlation functions yield no significant lags, but peak coefficients
generally decrease as energy separation of the bands increases on both short
and long timescales. We have measured the coherence between various X-ray bands
over the temporal frequency range of 6e-8 to 1e-4 Hz; this range includes the
temporal frequency of the low-frequency power spectral density function (PSD)
break tentatively detected by Markowitz et al. and includes the lowest temporal
frequency over which coherence has been measured in any AGN to date. Coherence
is generally near unity at these temporal frequencies, though it decreases
slightly as energy separation of the bands increases. Temporal
frequency-dependent phase lags are detected on short time scales; phase lags
are consistent with increasing as energy separation increases or as temporal
frequency decreases. All of these results are similar to those obtained
previously for several Seyfert galaxies and stellar-mass black hole systems.
Qualitatively, these results are consistent with the variability models of
Kotov et al. and Lyubarskii, wherein the X-ray variability is due to inwardly
propagating variations in the local mass accretion rate.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal, 2005, vol.
635, p. 180; version 2 has minor grammatical changes; 23 pages; uses
emulateapj
The sub-mJy radio sky in the Extended Chandra Deep Field South: source population
The sub-mJy radio population is a mixture of active systems, that is star
forming galaxies (SFGs) and active galactic nuclei (AGNs). We study a sample of
883 radio sources detected at 1.4 GHz in a deep Very Large Array survey of the
Extended Chandra Deep Field South (E-CDFS) that reaches a best rms sensitivity
of 6 microJy. We have used a simple scheme to disentangle SFGs, radio-quiet
(RQ), and radio-loud (RL) AGNs based on the combination of radio data with
Chandra X-ray data and mid-infrared observations from Spitzer. We find that at
flux densities between about 30 and 100 microJy the radio population is
dominated by SFGs (~60%) and that RQ AGNs become increasingly important over RL
ones below 100 microJy. We also compare the host galaxy properties of the three
classes in terms of morphology, optical colours and stellar masses. Our results
show that both SFG and RQ AGN host galaxies have blue colours and late type
morphology while RL AGNs tend to be hosted in massive red galaxies with early
type morphology. This supports the hypothesis that radio emission in SFGs and
RQ AGNs mainly comes from the same physical process: star formation in the host
galaxy.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in MNRA
Radio-loud Active Galaxies in the Northern ROSAT All-Sky Survey III: New Spectroscopic Identifications from the RGB BL Lac Survey
We present new spectroscopic identifications for 169 objects in the
RASS-Green Bank (RGB) catalog of radio- and X-ray-emitting AGN. These data
significantly increase the fraction of bright RGB objects with classifications.
Specifically, we report and discuss the classification of 66 radio-loud
quasars, 53 BL Lacs, 33 Broad Line Radio Galaxies, 5 Narrow Line Radio
Galaxies, 1 Seyfert I galaxy and 11 galaxies or galaxies in clusters. Over 78%
of the identifications we present here are new. The observations we report were
undertaken as part of our targeted search program to identify a new, large
unbiased sample of BL Lac Objects and we therefore discuss the BL Lac sample
extensively. Unlike many previous surveys, we impose no selection criteria
based on optical morphology, color or broadband spectral energy distribution.
Our classifications are based solely on a carefully defined set of
self-consistent spectroscopic classification criteria. We show the 53 RGB
presented here exhibit transitional properties between normal galaxies and BL
Lacs discovered previously. We show there is no clear separation in CaII break
strength between RGB BL Lacs and galaxies, with the distribution of break
strengths varying smoothly between 0% and 50%. We also show that the newly
discovered RGB BL Lacs reside in a "zone of avoidance" in the log(S_x/S_r) vs.
log(S_o/S_r) diagram. This has important implications for BL Lac search
strategies since it shows that RASS BL Lac samples will be severely incomplete
if candidates are chosen only from among those objects with the highest S_x/S_r
flux ratios.Comment: 21 pages text, 189 Figures, 4 tables, LaTeX2E, 4.2MB tar file
(compressed); special style file paper.sty provide
The Sedentary Multi-Frequency Survey. I. Statistical Identification and Cosmological Properties of HBL BL Lacs
We have assembled a multi-frequency database by cross-correlating the NVSS
catalog of radio sources with the RASSBSC list of soft X-ray sources, obtaining
optical magnitude estimates from the Palomar and UK Schmidt surveys as provided
by the APM and COSMOS on-line services. By exploiting the nearly unique
broad-band properties of High-Energy Peaked (HBL) BL Lacs we have statistically
identified a sample of 218 objects that is expected to include about 85% of BL
Lacs and that is therefore several times larger than all other published
samples of HBLs. Using a subset (155 objects) that is radio flux limited and
statistically well-defined we have derived the \vovm distribution and the
LogN-LogS of extreme HBLs (fx/fr >= 3E-10 erg/cm2/s/Jansky) down to 3.5 mJy. We
find that the LogN-LogS flattens around 20 mJy and that = 0.42 +/- 0.02.
This extends to the radio band earlier results, based on much smaller X-ray
selected samples, about the anomalous cosmological observational properties of
HBL BL Lacs. A comparison with the expected radio LogN-LogS of all BL Lacs
(based on a beaming model) shows that extreme HBLs make up roughly 2% of the BL
Lac population, independently of radio flux. This result, together with the
flatness of the radio logN-logS at low fluxes, is in contrast with the
predictions of a recent model which assumes an anti-correlation between peak
frequency and bolometric luminosity. The extreme fx/fr flux ratios and high
X-ray fluxes of these BL Lacs makes them good candidate TeV sources, some of
the brighter (and closer) ones possibly detectable with the current generation
of Cerenkov telescopes.Comment: 11 pages, LaTeX, 6 ps figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
The Deep X-Ray Radio Blazar Survey (DXRBS). III. Radio Number Counts, Evolutionary Properties, and Luminosity Function of Blazars
Our knowledge of the blazar surface densities and luminosity functions, which
are fundamental parameters, relies still on samples at relatively high flux
limits. As a result, our understanding of this rare class of active galactic
nuclei is mostly based on relatively bright and intrinsically luminous sources.
We present the radio number counts, evolutionary properties, and luminosity
functions of the faintest blazar sample with basically complete (~ 95%)
identifications. Based on the Deep X-ray Radio Blazar Survey (DXRBS), it
includes 129 flat-spectrum radio quasars (FSRQ) and 24 BL Lacs down to a 5 GHz
flux and power ~ 50 mJy and ~ 10^{24} W/Hz, respectively, an order of magnitude
improvement as compared to previously published (radio-selected) blazar
samples. DXRBS FSRQ are seen to evolve strongly, up to redshift ~ 1.5, above
which high-power sources show a decline in their comoving space density. DXRBS
BL Lacs, on the other hand, do not evolve. High-energy (HBL) and low-energy
(LBL) peaked BL Lacs share the same lack of cosmological evolution, which is at
variance with some previous results. The observed luminosity functions are in
good agreement with the predictions of unified schemes, with FSRQ getting close
to their expected minimum power. Despite the fact that the large majority of
our blazars are FSRQ, BL Lacs are intrinsically ~ 50 times more numerous.
Finally, the relative numbers of HBL and LBL in the radio and X-ray bands are
different from those predicted by the so-called "blazar sequence" and support a
scenario in which HBL represent a small minority (~ 10%) of all BL Lacs.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figures (1 color), accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
The VLA 1.4GHz Survey of the Extended Chandra Deep Field South: Second Data Release
Deep radio observations at 1.4GHz for the Extended Chandra Deep Field South
were performed in June through September of 2007 and presented in a first data
release (Miller et al. 2008). The survey was made using six separate pointings
of the Very Large Array (VLA) with over 40 hours of observation per pointing.
In the current paper, we improve on the data reduction to produce a second data
release (DR2) mosaic image. This DR2 image covers an area of about a third of a
square degree and reaches a best rms sensitivity of 6 uJy and has a typical
sensitivity of 7.4 uJy per 2.8" by 1.6" beam. We also present a more
comprehensive catalog, including sources down to peak flux densities of five or
more times the local rms noise along with information on source sizes and
relevant pointing data. We discuss in some detail the consideration of whether
sources are resolved under the complication of a radio image created as a
mosaic of separate pointings each suffering some degree of bandwidth smearing,
and the accurate evaluation of the flux densities of such sources. Finally, the
radio morphologies and optical/near-IR counterpart identifications (Bonzini et
al. 2012) are used to identify 17 likely multiple-component sources and arrive
at a catalog of 883 radio sources, which is roughly double the number of
sources contained in the first data release.Comment: to appear in the Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series; 41 page
Constraining the stellar energetic particle flux in young solar-like stars
Anomalies in the abundance measurements of short lived radionuclides in meteorites indicate that the protosolar nebulae was irradiated by a large number of energetic particles (E >âŒ10 MeV), often called solar cosmic rays. The particle flux of the contemporary Sun cannot explain these anomalies, but, similar to T Tauri stars, the young Sun was more active and probably produced enough high energy particles. However, the stellar particle (SP) flux of young stars is essentially unknown. We model the impact of high-energy ionization sources on the chemistry of the circumstellar environment (disks and envelopes). The model includes X-ray radiative transfer and makes use of particle transport models to calculate the individual molecular hydrogen ionization rates. We study the impact on the chemistry via the ionization tracers HCO+ and N2H+. We argue that spatially resolved observations of those molecules combined with detailed models allow for disentangling the contribution of the individual high-energy ionization sources and to put constraints on the SP flux in young stars.Postprin
The Deep X-ray Radio Blazar Survey (DXRBS). I. Methods and First Results
We have undertaken a survey of archived, pointed ROSAT PSPC data for blazars
by correlating the ROSAT WGACAT database with several publicly available radio
catalogs, restricting our candidate list to serendipitous flat radio spectrum
sources (alpha_r <= 0.70). Here we discuss our survey methods, identification
procedure and first results. Our survey is found to be ~ 95% efficient at
finding flat-spectrum radio-loud quasars (FSRQs, 59 of our first 85 IDs) and BL
Lacertae objects (22 of our first 85 IDs), a figure which is comparable to or
greater than that achieved by other radio and X-ray survey techniques.
The identifications presented here show that all previous samples of blazars
(even when taken together) did not representatively survey the blazar
population, missing critical regions of (L_X,L_R) parameter space within which
large fractions of the blazar population lie. Particularly important is the
identification of a large population of FSRQs (>~ 25% of DXRBS FSRQs) with
ratios of X-ray to radio luminosity >~ 10^-6 (alpha_rx <~ 0.78). In addition,
due to our greater sensitivity, DXRBS has already more than doubled the number
of FSRQs in complete samples with 5 GHz (radio) luminosities between 10^31.5
and 10^33.5 erg/s/Hz and fills in the region of parameter space between X-ray
selected and radio-selected samples of BL Lacs. DXRBS is the very first sample
to contain statistically significant numbers of blazars at low luminosities,
approaching what should be the lower end of the FSRQ luminosity function.Comment: 34 pages, 7 figures, 6 tables, LaTeX file, uses aaspp4.sty. To appear
in the Astronomical Journa
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