159 research outputs found
Evolution of the UV Excess in Early-Type Galaxies
We examine the UV emission from luminous early-type galaxies as a function of
redshift. We perform a stacking analysis using Galaxy Evolution Explorer
(GALEX) images of galaxies in the NOAO Deep Wide Field Survey (NDWFS) Bo\"otes
field and examine the evolution in the UV colors of the average galaxy. Our
sample, selected to have minimal ongoing star formation based on the optical to
mid-IR SEDs of the galaxies, includes 1843 galaxies spanning the redshift range
. We find evidence that the strength of the UV excess
decreases, on average, with redshift, and our measurements also show moderate
disagreement with previous models of the UV excess. Our results show little
evolution in the shape of the UV continuum with redshift, consistent either
with the binary model for the formation of Extreme Horizontal Branch (EHB)
stars or with no evolution in EHB morphology with look-back time. However, the
binary formation model predicts that the strength of the UV excess should also
be relatively constant, in contradiction with our measured results. Finally, we
see no significant influence of a galaxy's environment on the strength of its
UV excess.Comment: 30 pages, 10 figures; accepted by ApJ. Modified from original version
to reflect referee's comment
AGN and Star-Formation Properties of Inside-out Assembled Galaxy Candidates at z<0.1
We study a sample of 48127 galaxies selected from the SDSS MPA-JHU catalogue,
with and . Local galaxies in
this stellar mass range have been shown to have systematically shorter assembly
times within their inner regions () when compared to that of the
galaxy as a whole, contrary to lower or higher mass galaxies which show
consistent assembly times at all radii. Hence, we refer to these galaxies as
Inside-Out Assembled Galaxy (IOAG) candidates. We find that the majority of
IOAG candidates with well-detected emission lines are classified as either AGN
(40%) or composite (40%) in the BPT diagram. We also find that the majority of
our sources are located below the main sequence of star formation, and within
the green valley or red sequence. Most BPT-classified star-forming IOAG
candidates have spiral morphologies and are in the main sequence, whereas
Seyfert 2 and composites have mostly spiral morphologies but quiescent star
formation rates (SFRs). We argue that a high fraction of IOAG candidates seem
to be in the process of quenching, moving from the blue cloud to the red
sequence. Those classified as AGN have systematically lower SFRs than
star-forming galaxies suggesting that AGN activity may be related to this
quenching. However, the spiral morphology of these galaxies remains in place,
suggesting that the central star-formation is suppressed before the
morphological transformation occurs.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figure, accepted for publication in MNRAS. A video
description can be seen here https://youtu.be/oxfjbqMqeQ
The Broadband X-Ray Spectrum of the X-Ray-obscured Type 1 AGN 2MASX J193013.80+341049.5
We present results from modeling the broadband X-ray spectrum of the Type 1 active galactic nucleus (AGN) 2MASX J193013.80+341049.5 using NuSTAR, Swift, and archival XMM-Newton observations. We find this source to be highly X-ray obscured, with column densities exceeding 10²³ cm⁻² across all epochs of X-ray observations, spanning an 8 yr period. However, the source exhibits prominent broad optical emission lines, consistent with an unobscured Type 1 AGN classification. We fit the X-ray spectra with both phenomenological reflection models and physically motivated torus models to model the X-ray absorption. We examine the spectral energy distribution of this source and investigate some possible scenarios to explain the mismatch between X-ray and optical classifications. We compare the ratio of reddening to X-ray absorbing column density (E_(B−V)/N_H) and find that 2MASX J193013.80+341049.5 likely has a much lower dust-to-gas ratio relative to the Galactic interstellar medium, suggesting that the broad line region itself could provide the source of extra X-ray obscuration, being composed of low-ionization, dust-free gas
A Kiloparsec-Scale Binary Active Galactic Nucleus Confirmed by the Expanded Very Large Array
We report the confirmation of a kpc-scale binary active galactic nucleus
(AGN) with high-resolution radio images from the Expanded Very Large Array
(EVLA). SDSS J150243.1+111557 is a double-peaked [O III] AGN at z = 0.39
selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Our previous near-infrared adaptive
optics imaging reveals two nuclei separated by 1.4" (7.4 kpc), and our optical
integral-field spectroscopy suggests that they are a type-1--type-2 AGN pair.
However, these data alone cannot rule out the single AGN scenario where the
narrow emission-line region associated with the secondary is photoionized by
the broad-line AGN in the primary. Our new EVLA images at 1.4, 5.0, and 8.5 GHz
show two steep-spectrum compact radio sources spatially coincident with the
optical nuclei. The radio power of the type-2 AGN is an order-of-magnitude in
excess of star-forming galaxies with similar extinction-corrected [O II] 3727
luminosities, indicating that the radio emission is powered by accretion.
Therefore, SDSS J150243.1+111557 is one of the few confirmed kpc-scale binary
AGN systems. Spectral-energy-distribution modeling shows that SDSS
J150243.1+111557 is a merger of two ~10^{11} M_sun galaxies. With both black
hole masses around 10^8 Msun, the AGNs are accreting at ~10 times below the
Eddington limit.Comment: ApJL accepted. 6 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
A UV to Mid-IR Study of AGN Selection
We classify the spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of 431,038 sources in
the 9 sq. deg Bootes field of the NOAO Deep Wide-Field Survey (NDWFS). There
are up to 17 bands of data available per source, including ultraviolet (GALEX),
optical (NDWFS), near-IR (NEWFIRM), and mid-infrared (IRAC/MIPS) data, as well
as spectroscopic redshifts for ~20,000 objects, primarily from the AGN and
Galaxy Evolution Survey (AGES). We fit galaxy, AGN, stellar, and brown dwarf
templates to the observed SEDs, which yield spectral classes for the Galactic
sources and photometric redshifts and galaxy/AGN luminosities for the
extragalactic sources. The photometric redshift precision of the galaxy and AGN
samples are sigma/(1+z)=0.040 and sigma/(1+z)=0.169, respectively, with the
worst 5% outliers excluded. Based on the reduced chi-squared of the SED fit for
each SED model, we are able to distinguish between Galactic and extragalactic
sources for sources brighter than I=23.5. We compare the SED fits for a
galaxy-only model and a galaxy+AGN model. Using known X-ray and spectroscopic
AGN samples, we confirm that SED fitting can be successfully used as a method
to identify large populations of AGN, including spatially resolved AGN with
significant contributions from the host galaxy and objects with the emission
line ratios of "composite" spectra. We also use our results to compare to the
X-ray, mid-IR, optical color and emission line ratio selection techniques. For
an F-ratio threshold of F>10 we find 16,266 AGN candidates brighter than I=23.5
and a surface density of ~1900 AGN per deg^2.Comment: Submitted to ApJ, 35 pages, 17 figures, 2 table
A new physical interpretation of optical and infrared variability in quasars
Changing-look quasars are a recently identified class of active galaxies in
which the strong UV continuum and/or broad optical hydrogen emission lines
associated with unobscured quasars either appear or disappear on timescales of
months to years. The physical processes responsible for this behaviour are
still debated, but changes in the black hole accretion rate or accretion disk
structure appear more likely than changes in obscuration. Here we report on
four epochs of spectroscopy of SDSS J110057.70-005304.5, a quasar at a redshift
of whose UV continuum and broad hydrogen emission lines have faded,
and then returned over the past 20 years. The change in this quasar
was initially identified in the infrared, and an archival spectrum from 2010
shows an intermediate phase of the transition during which the flux below
rest-frame 3400\AA\ has decreased by close to an order of magnitude.
This combination is unique compared to previously published examples of
changing-look quasars, and is best explained by dramatic changes in the
innermost regions of the accretion disk. The optical continuum has been rising
since mid-2016, leading to a prediction of a rise in hydrogen emission line
flux in the next year. Increases in the infrared flux are beginning to follow,
delayed by a 3 year observed timescale. If our model is confirmed, the
physics of changing-look quasars are governed by processes at the innermost
stable circular orbit (ISCO) around the black hole, and the structure of the
innermost disk. The easily identifiable and monitored changing-look quasars
would then provide a new probe and laboratory of the nuclear central engine.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, 3 tables. Published in MNRAS. All code and data
links on GitHub, https://github.com/d80b2t/WISE_L
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