5,339 research outputs found
Fuelling Active Galactic Nuclei
We suggest that most nearby active galactic nuclei are fed by a series of
small--scale, randomly--oriented accretion events. Outside a certain radius
these events promote rapid star formation, while within it they fuel the
supermassive black hole. We show that the events have a characteristic time
evolution. This picture agrees with several observational facts. The expected
luminosity function is broadly in agreement with that observed for
moderate--mass black holes. The spin of the black hole is low, and aligns with
the inner disc in each individual feeding event. This implies radio jets
aligned with the axis of the obscuring torus, and uncorrelated with the
large--scale structure of the host galaxy. The ring of young stars observed
about the Galactic Centre are close to where our picture predicts that star
formation should occur.Comment: MNRAS, in pres
Virtual geological outcrops - fieldwork and analysis made less exhaustive?
For geologists studying outcrops in the field, there is an ever‐increasing need for the acquisition of accurate and comprehensive data, whatever their purpose. Fortunately, this need is mirrored by an expanding range of digital data capturing technologies that provide the possibility of examining geological outcrops in minute detail from the desktop. Although difficult technologically, there is also a need to combine differing datasets into a single, accurate, digital model that will allow field geologists to place their data in a wider context. This paper examines the techniques available, and highlights new Light Detection and Ranging (LIDAR) technology which should prove to be a unifying technique, being able to combine images and local coordinates on‐site
Radiation-Driven Warping: The Origin of Warps and Precession in Accretion Disks
A geometrically thin, optically thick, warped accretion disk with a central
source of luminosity is subject to non-axisymmetric forces due to radiation
pressure; the resulting torque acts to modify the warp. In a recent paper,
\cite{pri96} used a local analysis to show that initially planar accretion
disks are unstable to warping driven by radiation torque. Here we extend this
work with a global analysis of the stable and unstable modes. We confirm
Pringle's conclusion that thin centrally-illuminated accretion disks are
generically unstable to warping via this mechanism; we discuss the
time-evolution and likely steady-state of such systems and show specifically
that this mechanism can explain the warping of the disk of water masers in NGC
4258 and the 164-day precession period of the accretion disk in SS 433.
Radiation-driven warping and precession provides a robust mechanism for
producing warped, precessing accretion disks in active galactic nuclei and
X-ray binary systems.Comment: 16 pages, latex, 3 figure
An Investigation into the Geometry of Seyfert Galaxies
We present a new method for the statistical investigation into the
distributions of the angle beta between the radio axis and the normal to the
galactic disk for a sample of Seyfert galaxies. We discuss how further
observations of the sample galaxies can strengthen the conclusions. Our data
are consistent with the hypothesis that AGN jets are oriented randomly in
space, independent of the position of the plane of the galaxy. By making the
simple assumption that the Standard Model of AGN holds, with a universal
opening angle of the thick torus of phi_c, we demonstrate a statistical method
to obtain an estimate of phi_c. Our data are not consistent with the
simple-minded idea that Seyfert 1s and Seyfert 2s are differentiated solely by
whether or not our line of sight lies within some fixed angle of the jet axis.
Our result is significant on the 2 sigma level and can thus be considered only
suggestive, not conclusive. A complete sample of Seyfert galaxies selected on
an isotropic property is required to obtain a conclusive result.Comment: 13 pages, Tex, 5 Postscript figures. Accepted Ap
The alignment of disk and black hole spins in active galactic nuclei
The inner parts of an accretion disk around a spinning black hole are forced
to align with the spin of the hole by the Bardeen-Petterson effect. Assuming
that any jet produced by such a system is aligned with the angular momentum of
either the hole or the inner disk, this can, in principle provide a mechanism
for producing steady jets in AGN whose direction is independent of the angular
momentum of the accreted material. However, the torque which aligns the inner
disk with the hole, also, by Newton's third law, tends to align the spin of the
hole with the outer accretion disk. In this letter, we calculate this alignment
timescale for a black hole powering an AGN, and show that it is relatively
short. This timescale is typically much less than the derived ages for jets in
radio loud AGN, and implies that the jet directions are not in general
controlled by the spin of the black hole. We speculate that the jet directions
are most likely controlled either by the angular momentum of the accreted
material or by the gravitational potential of the host galaxy.Comment: 4 pages, LateX file, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
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