2,263 research outputs found
Does the proton-to-electron mass ratio vary in the course of cosmological evolution?
The possible cosmological variation of the proton-to-electron mass ratio was
estimated by measuring the H_2 wavelengths in the high-resolution spectrum of
the quasar Q~0347-382. Our analysis yielded an estimate for the possible
deviation of \mu value in the past, 10 Gyr ago: for the unweighted value
; for the weighted value Since the significance of the both
results does not exceed 3, further observations are needed to increase
the statistical significance. In any case, this result may be considered as the
most stringent estimate on an upper limit of a possible variation of \mu (95%
C.L.): This value serves as an
effective tool for selection of models determining a relation between possible
cosmological deviations of the fine-structure constant \alpha and the
elementary particle masses (m, m, etc.).Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure. Talk presented at the JENAM 2002 Workshop on
Varying Fundamental Constants, Porto, 4th September 2002. To be published in
the Conference Proceeding
The Nature of Associated Absorption and the UV-X-ray Connection in 3C 288.1
We discuss new Hubble Space Telescope spectroscopy of the radio-loud quasar,
3C 288.1. The data cover ~590 A to ~1610 A in the quasar rest frame. They
reveal a wealth of associated absorption lines (AALs) with no accompanying
Lyman-limit absorption. The metallic AALs range in ionization from C III and N
III to Ne VIII and Mg X. We use these data and photoionization models to derive
the following properties of the AAL gas: 1) There are multiple ionization zones
within the AAL region, spanning a factor of at least ~50 in ionization
parameter. 2) The overall ionization is consistent with the ``warm'' X-ray
continuum absorbers measured in Seyfert 1 nuclei and other QSOs. However, 3)
the column densities implied by the AALs in 3C 288.1 are too low to produce
significant bound-free absorption at any UV-X-ray wavelengths. Substantial
X-ray absorption would require yet another zone, having a much higher
ionization or a much lower velocity dispersion than the main AAL region. 4) The
total hydrogen column density in the AAL gas is log N_H (cm-2)= 20.2. 5) The
metallicity is roughly half solar. 6) The AALs have deconvolved widths of ~900
km/s and their centroids are consistent with no shift from the quasar systemic
velocity (conservatively within +/-1000 km/s). 7) There are no direct
indicators of the absorber's location in our data, but the high ionization and
high metallicity both suggest a close physical relationship to the quasar/host
galaxy environment. Finally, the UV continuum shape gives no indication of a
``blue bump'' at higher energies. There is a distinct break of unknown origin
at ~1030 A, and the decline toward higher energies (with spectral index alpha =
-1.73, for f_nu ~ nu^alpha) is even steeper than a single power-law
interpolation from 1030 A to soft X-rays.Comment: 27 pages with figures and tables, in press with Ap
Evolution of dispersion in the cosmic deuterium abundance
Deuterium is created during Big Bang Nucleosynthesis, and, in contrast to the
other light stable nuclei, can only be destroyed thereafter by fusion in
stellar interiors. In this paper we study the cosmic evolution of the deuterium
abundance in the interstellar medium and its dispersion using realistic galaxy
evolution models. We find that models that reproduce the observed metal
abundance are compatible with observations of the deuterium abundance in the
local ISM and z ~ 3 absorption line systems. In particular, we reproduce the
low astration factor which we attribute to a low global star formation
efficiency. We calculate the dispersion in deuterium abundance arising from
different structure formation histories in different parts of the Universe. Our
model also predicts an extremely tight correlation between deuterium and metal
abundances which could be used to measure the primordial deuterium abundance.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS Letters.
Figures rearranged to match published versio
High-Resolution Spectroscopy from 3050 to 10000 A of the HDF-S QSO J2233-606 with UVES at the ESO VLT
We report on high-resolution observations () of the Hubble
Deep Field South QSO J2233-606 obtained with the VLT UV-Visual Echelle
Spectrograph (UVES). We present spectral data for the wavelength region \AA. The ratio of the final spectrum is about 50 per
resolution element at 4000 \AA, 90 at 5000 \AA, 80 at 6000 \AA, 40 at 8000 \AA.
Redshifts, column densities and Doppler widths of the absorption features have
been determined with Voigt-profile fitting. A total of 621 lines have been
measured. In particular 270 Ly-alpha lines, 41 Ly-beta and 24 systems
containing metal lines have been identified. Together with other data in the
literature, the present spectrum confirms that the evolution of the number
density of Ly-alpha lines with \huno has an upturn at .Comment: 34 pages Latex, with 3 PostScript figures. Astronomical Journal, in
press. A few revised upper limit
The origin of dispersion in DLA metallicities
Recent chemical abundance measurements of damped Ly-alpha absorbers (DLAs)
revealed an intrinsic scatter in their metallicity of ~0.5 dex out to z~5. In
order to explore the origin of this scatter, we build a semi-analytic model
which traces the chemical evolution of the interstellar matter in small regions
of the Universe with different mean density, from over- to underdense regions.
We show that the different histories of structure formation in these regions,
namely halo abundance, mass and stellar content, is reflected in the chemical
properties of the protogalaxies, and in particular of DLAs. We calculate mean
metallicity-redshift relations and show that the metallicity dispersion arising
from this environmental effect amounts to ~0.25 dex and is an important
contributor to the observed overall intrinsic scatter.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter
Molecular hydrogen absorption systems in Sloan Digital Sky Survey
We present a systematic search for molecular hydrogen absorption systems at
high redshift in quasar spectra from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) II
Data Release 7 and SDSS-III Data Release 9. We have selected candidates using a
modified profile fitting technique taking into account that the Ly
forest can effectively mimic H absorption systems at the resolution of SDSS
data. To estimate the confidence level of the detections, we use two methods: a
Monte-Carlo sampling and an analysis of control samples. The analysis of
control samples allows us to define regions of the spectral quality parameter
space where H absorption systems can be confidently identified. We find
that H absorption systems with column densities
can be detected in only less than 3% of SDSS quasar spectra. We estimate the
upper limit on the detection rate of saturated H absorption systems () in Damped Ly- (DLA) systems to be about 7%. We
provide a sample of 23 confident H absorption system candidates that would
be interesting to follow up with high resolution spectrographs. There is a
1 color excess and non-significant extinction excess
in quasar spectra with an H candidate compared to standard DLA-bearing
quasar spectra. The equivalent widths (EWs) of C II, Si II and Al III (but not
Fe II) absorptions associated with H candidate DLAs are larger compared to
standard DLAs. This is probably related to a larger spread in velocity of the
absorption lines in the H bearing sample.Comment: 17 pages, 17 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Etude économique de la pêche maritime et de la commercialisation du poisson en République Populaire du Congo
Temperature and Kinematics of CIV Absorption Systems
We use Keck HIRES spectra of three intermediate redshift QSOs to study the
physical state and kinematics of the individual components of CIV selected
heavy element absorption systems. Fewer than 8 % of all CIV lines with column
densities greater than 10^{12.5} cm^{-2} have Doppler parameters b < 6 km/s. A
formal decomposition into thermal and non-thermal motion using the simultaneous
presence of SiIV gives a mean thermal Doppler parameter b_{therm}(CIV) = 7.2
km/s, corresponding to a temperature of 38,000 K although temperatures possibly
in excess of 300,000 K occur occasionally. We also find tentative evidence for
a mild increase of temperature with HI column density. Non-thermal motions
within components are typically small (< 10 km/s) for most systems, indicative
of a quiescent environment. The two-point correlation function (TPCF) of CIV
systems on scales up to 500 km/s suggests that there is more than one source of
velocity dispersion. The shape of the TPCF can be understood if the CIV systems
are caused by ensembles of objects with the kinematics of dwarf galaxies on a
small scale, while following the Hubble flow on a larger scale. Individual high
redshift CIV components may be the building blocks of future normal galaxies in
a hierarchical structure formation scenario.Comment: submitted to the ApJ Letters, March 16, 1996 (in press); (13 Latex
pages, 4 Postscript figures, and psfig.sty included
On the Search for Quasar Light Echoes
The UV radiation from a quasar leaves a characteristic pattern in the
distribution of ionized hydrogen throughout the surrounding space. This pattern
or light echo propagates through the intergalactic medium at the speed of
light, and can be observed by its imprint on the Ly-alpha forest spectra of
background sources. As the echo persists after the quasar has switched off, it
offers the possibility of searching for dead quasars, and constraining their
luminosities and lifetimes. We outline a technique to search for and
characterize these light echoes. To test the method, we create artificial
Ly-alpha forest spectra from cosmological simulations at z=3, apply light
echoes and search for them. We show how the simulations can also be used to
quantify the significance level of any detection. We find that light echoes
from the brightest quasars could be found in observational data. With
absorption line spectra of 100 redshift z~3-3.5 quasars or galaxies in a 1
square degree area, we expect that ~10 echoes from quasars with B band
luminosities L_B=3x10^45 ergs/s exist that could be found at 95% confidence,
assuming a quasar lifetime of ~10^7 yr. Even a null result from such a search
would have interesting implications for our understanding of quasar
luminosities and lifetimes.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, ApJ in pres
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