1,272 research outputs found
Constraint on the quadrupole moment of super-massive black hole candidates from the estimate of the mean radiative efficiency of AGN
The super-massive objects at the center of many galaxies are commonly thought
to be black holes. In 4-dimensional general relativity, a black hole is
completely specified by its mass and by its spin angular momentum . All
the higher multipole moments of the gravitational field depend in a very
specific way on these two parameters. For instance, the mass quadrupole moment
is . If we can estimate , , and for the super-massive
objects in galactic nuclei, we over-constrain the theory and we can test the
black hole hypothesis. While there are many works studying how this can be done
with future observations, in this paper a constraint on the quadrupole moment
of these objects is obtained by using the current estimate of the mean
radiative efficiency of AGN. In terms of the anomalous quadrupole moment ,
the bound is .Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. v2: refereed versio
What X-ray source counts can tell about large-scale matter distribution
Sources generating most of the X-ray background (XRB) are dispersed over a
wide range of redshifts. Thus, statistical characteristics of the source
distribution carry information on matter distribution on very large scales. We
test the possibility of detecting the variation in the X-ray source number
counts over the celestial sphere. A large number of Chandra pointings spread
over both galactic hemispheres are investigated. We searched for all the
point-like sources in the soft band of 0.5 - 2 keV and statistically assessed
the population of sources below the detection threshold. A homogeneous sample
of the number counts at fluxes above ~10^{-15} erg s^{-1} cm^{-2} was
constructed for more than 300 ACIS fields. The sources were counted within a
circular area of 15 arcmin diameter. The count correlations between overlapping
fields were used to assess the accuracy of the computational methods used in
the analysis. The average number of sources in the investigated sample amounts
to 46 per field. It is shown that the source number counts vary between fields
at a level exceeding the fluctuation amplitude expected for the random
(Poissonian) distribution. The excess fluctuations are attributed to the cosmic
variance generated by the large-scale structures. The rms variations of the
source counts due to the cosmic variance within the 15$ arcmin circle reach 8%
of the average number counts. An amplitude of the potential correlations of the
source counts on angular scales larger than the size of a single pointing
remains below the noise level.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures; expansion of observational material resulted in
substantial changes; accepted for publication in A&
The Relation between Black Hole Mass, Bulge Mass, and Near-Infrared Luminosity
We present new accurate near-infrared (NIR) spheroid (bulge) structural
parameters obtained by two-dimensional image analysis for all galaxies with a
direct black hole (BH) mass determination. As expected, NIR bulge luminosities
Lbul and BH masses are tightly correlated, and if we consider only those
galaxies with secure BH mass measurement and accurate Lbul (27 objects), the
spread of MBH-Lbul is similar to MBH-sigma, where sigma is the effective
stellar velocity dispersion. We find an intrinsic rms scatter of ~0.3 dex in
log MBH. By combining the bulge effective radii R_e measured in our analysis
with sigma, we find a tight linear correlation (rms ~ 0.25 dex) between MBH and
the virial bulge mass (propto R_e sigma^2), with ~ 0.002. A partial
correlation analysis shows that MBH depends on both sigma and R_e, and that
both variables are necessary to drive the correlations between MBH and other
bulge properties.Comment: Astrophysical Journal Letters, in pres
Hydrodynamic Simulation of the Cosmological X-ray Background
(Abridged) We use a hydrodynamic simulation of a LambdaCDM model to predict
the extragalactic X-ray background (XRB), focussing on emission from the
intergalactic medium (IGM). We also include X-rays from point sources
associated with galaxies in the simulation, and make maps of the angular
distribution of the emission. We find that filaments in the maps are not
evident, being diluted by projection. In the soft (0.5-2 keV) band, the mean
intensity of radiation from intergalactic and cluster gas is 2.3*10^-12
ergdeg^-2cm^-2s^-1, 35% of the total soft band emission. This is compatible at
the ~1 sigma level with estimates of the unresolved soft background from ROSAT
and {\it Chandra}. Only 4% of the hard (2-10 keV) emission is associated with
the IGM. Relative to AGN flux, the IGM component peaks at a lower redshift
(median z~0.45) so its clustering makes an important contribution to that of
the total XRB. The angular correlations on 0.1-10 arcmin scales are
significant, with an amplitude roughly consistent with an extrapolation of
recent ROSAT results to small scales. A cross-correlation of the XRB against
nearby galaxies taken from a simulated redshift survey also yields a strong
signal from the IGM. Although some recent papers have argued that the expected
soft band intensity from gas in galaxy, group, and cluster halos would exceed
XRB limits unless much of the gas is expelled by supernova feedback, we obtain
reasonable compatibility with current observations in a simulation that
incorporates cooling, star formation, and only modest feedback. A prediction of
our model is that the unresolved portion of the soft XRB will remain mostly
unresolved.Comment: Improved referencing of related papers. Submitted to ApJ, 19 pages,
17 postscript figures, most reduced in resolution, emulateapj.sty, for full
resolution version, see http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/~rcroft/xray.ps.g
The redshift-dependence of gamma-ray absorption in the environments of strong-line AGN
The case of gamma-ray absorption due to photon-photon pair production of jet
photons in the external photon environment like accretion disk and broad-line
region radiation field of gamma-ray loud active galactic nuclei (AGN) that
exhibit strong emission lines is considered. I demonstrate that this ''local
opacity'', if detected, will almost unavoidably be redshift-dependent in the
sub-TeV range. This introduces non-negligible biases, and complicates
approaches for studying the evolution of the extragalactic background light
with contemporary GeV instruments like e.g. the Gamma-ray Large Area Space
Telescope (GLAST), etc., where the gamma-ray horizon is probed by means of
statistical analysis of absorption features (e.g. Fazio-Stecker relation, etc.)
in AGN spectra at various redshifts. It particularly applies to strong-line
quasars where external photon fields are potentially involved in gamma-ray
production.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures; accepted for publication in Ap
The AGN-starburst connection, Galactic superwinds, and M_BH - sigma
Recent observations of young galaxies at redshifts z ~ 3 have revealed
simultaneous AGN and starburst activity, as well as galaxy-wide superwinds. I
show that there is probably a close connection between these phenomena by
extending an earlier treatment of the M_BH - sigma relation (King, 2003). As
the black hole grows, an outflow drives a shell into the surrounding gas. This
stalls after a dynamical time at a size determined by the hole's current mass
and thereafter grows on the Salpeter timescale. The gas trapped inside this
bubble cools and forms stars and is recycled as accretion and outflow. The
consequent high metallicity agrees with that commonly observed in AGN
accretion. Once the hole reaches a critical mass this region attains a size
such that the gas can no longer cool efficiently. The resulting energy-driven
flow expels the remaining gas as a superwind, fixing both the M_BH - sigma
relation and the total stellar bulge mass at values in good agreement with
observation. Black hole growth thus produces starbursts and ultimately a
superwind.Comment: ApJ, in press, 4 page
Changes in left atrial deformation in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy: Evaluation by vector velocity imaging.
OBJECTIVES: Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) represents a generalized myopathic process affecting both ventricular and atrial myocardium. We assessed the global and regional left atrial (LA) function and its relation to left ventricular (LV) mechanics and clinical status in patients with HCM using Vector Velocity Imaging (VVI). METHODS: VVI of the LA and LV was acquired from apical four- and two-chamber views of 108 HCM patients (age 40 ± 19years, 56.5% men) and 33 healthy subjects, all had normal LV systolic function. The LA subendocardium was traced to obtain atrial volumes, ejection fraction, velocities, and strain (ϵ)/strain rate (SR) measurements. RESULTS: Left atrial reservoir (ϵsys,SRsys) and conduit (early diastolic SRe) function were significantly reduced in HCM compared to controls (P - 1.8s(- 1) was 81% sensitive and 30% specific, SRa> - 1.5s(- 1) was 73% sensitive and 40% specific. By multivariate analysis global LVϵsys and LV septal thickness are independent predictors for LAϵsys, while end systolic diameter is the only independent predictor for SRsys, P < .001. CONCLUSION: Left atrial reservoir and conduit function as measured by VVI were significantly impaired while contractile function was preserved among HCM patients. Left atrial deformation was greatly influenced by LV mechanics and correlated to severity of phenotype
Ultracold quantum gases in triangular optical lattices
Over the last years the exciting developments in the field of ultracold atoms
confined in optical lattices have led to numerous theoretical proposals devoted
to the quantum simulation of problems e.g. known from condensed matter physics.
Many of those ideas demand for experimental environments with non-cubic lattice
geometries. In this paper we report on the implementation of a versatile
three-beam lattice allowing for the generation of triangular as well as
hexagonal optical lattices. As an important step the superfluid-Mott insulator
(SF-MI) quantum phase transition has been observed and investigated in detail
in this lattice geometry for the first time. In addition to this we study the
physics of spinor Bose-Einstein condensates (BEC) in the presence of the
triangular optical lattice potential, especially spin changing dynamics across
the SF-MI transition. Our results suggest that below the SF-MI phase
transition, a well-established mean-field model describes the observed data
when renormalizing the spin-dependent interaction. Interestingly this opens new
perspectives for a lattice driven tuning of a spin dynamics resonance occurring
through the interplay of quadratic Zeeman effect and spin-dependent
interaction. We finally discuss further lattice configurations which can be
realized with our setup.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figure
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