403 research outputs found
The Case for Optically-Thick High Velocity Broad Line Region Gas in Active Galactic Nuclei
A combined analysis of the profiles of the main broad quasar emission lines
in both Hubble Space Telescope and optical spectra shows that while the
profiles of the strong UV lines are quite similar, there is frequently a strong
increase in the Ly-alpha/H-alpha ratio in the high-velocity gas. We show that
the suggestion that the high velocity gas is optically-thin presents many
problems. We show that the relative strengths of the high velocity wings arise
naturally in an optically-thick BLR component. An optically-thick model
successfully explains the equivalent widths of the lines, the Ly-alpha/H-alpha
ratios and flatter Balmer decrements in the line wings, the strengths of CIII]
and the lambda 1400 blend, and the strong variability of high-velocity,
high-ionization lines (especially HeII and HeI).Comment: 34 pages in AASTeX, including 10 pages of figures. Submitted to
Astrophysical Journa
Blue outliers among intermediate redshift quasars
[Oiii]{\lambda}{\lambda}4959,5007 "blue outliers" -- that are suggestive of
outflows in the narrow line region of quasars -- appear to be much more common
at intermediate z (high luminosity) than at low z. About 40% of quasars in a
Hamburg ESO intermediate-z sample of 52 sources qualify as blue outliers (i.e.,
quasars with [OIII] {\lambda}{\lambda}4959,5007 lines showing large systematic
blueshifts with respect to rest frame). We discuss major findings on what has
become an intriguing field in active galactic nuclei research and stress the
relevance of blue outliers to feedback and host galaxy evolution.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysics and Space Science, Special
Issue on Line Shifts in Astrophysics and Laboratory Plasm
Modular curves with many points over finite fields
We describe an algorithm to compute the number of points
over finite fields on a broad class of modular curves: we
consider quotients XH /W for H a subgroup of GL2(Z/nZ)
such that for each prime p dividing n, the subgroup H at
p is either a Borel subgroup, a Cartan subgroup, or the
normalizer of a Cartan subgroup of GL2(Z/peZ), and for
W any subgroup of the Atkin-Lehner involutions of XH .
We applied our algorithm to more than ten thousand curves
of genus up to 50, finding more than one hundred record breaking curves, namely curves X/Fq with genus g that
improve the previously known lower bound for the maximum
number of points over Fq of a curve with genus g. As
a key technical tool for our computations, we prove the
generalization of Chen’s isogeny to all the Cartan modular
curves of composite level
Quasars: from the Physics of Line Formation to Cosmology
Quasars accreting matter at very high rates (known as extreme Population A
[xA] or super-Eddington accreting massive black holes) provide a new class of
distance indicators covering cosmic epochs from the present-day Universe up to
less than 1 Gyr from the Big Bang. The very high accretion rate makes it
possible that massive black holes hosted in xA quasars radiate at a stable,
extreme luminosity-to-mass ratio. This in turns translates into stable physical
and dynamical conditions of the mildly ionized gas in the quasar low-ionization
line emitting region. In this contribution, we analyze the main optical and UV
spectral properties of extreme Population A quasars that make them easily
identifiable in large spectroscopic surveys at low-z (z < 1) and intermediate-z
(2 < z < 2.6), and the physical conditions that are derived for the formation
of their emission lines. Ultimately, the analysis supports the possibility of
identifying a virial broadening estimator from low-ionization line widths, and
the conceptual validity of the redshift-independent luminosity estimates based
on virial broadening for a known luminosity-to-mass ratio.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures. Invited lecture at SPIG 2018, Belgrade. To
appear in Ato
High-redshift quasars along the Main Sequence
We aim to evaluate the behaviour of our 22 high-redshift (2.2 < z < 3.7) and
high-luminosity (47.39 < Lbol < 48.36) quasars in the context of the
4-Dimensional Eigenvector 1. Our approach involves studying quasar physics
through spectroscopic exploration of UV and optical emission line diagnostics.
We are using new observations from ISAAC/VLT and mainly from the SDSS to cover
the optical and the UV rest-frames, respectively. Emission lines are
characterised both through a quantitative parametrisation of the line profiles,
and by decomposing the emission line profiles using multicomponent fitting
routines. We provide spectrophotometric properties and line profile
measurements for Hb+[O iii], as well as for Si iv+O iv], C iv+He ii and the
1900 blend. Six out of the 22 objects present a significant blueshifted
component on the Hb profile, and in 14/22 cases an Hb outflowing component
associated to [O iii] is detected. The majority of [O iii] emission line
profiles show blueshifted velocities larger than 250 km s^-1. [O iii] and C iv
blueshifts show very high amplitudes and a high degree of correlation. Line
width and shift are correlated for both [O iii] and C iv, suggesting that
emission from outflowing gas is providing a substantial broadening to both
lines. Otherwise, the links between C iv centroid velocity at half intensity
(c(1/2)), Eddington ratio (L/LEdd), and bolometric luminosity are found to be
in agreement with previous studies of high-luminosity quasars. Our analysis
suggests that the behaviour of quasars of very high luminosity all along the
main sequence is strongly affected by powerful outflows involving a broad range
of spatial scales. The main sequence correlations remain valid at high redshift
and high luminosity even if a systematic increase in line width is observed.
Scaling laws based on UV Al iii and Hb emission lines are equally reliable
estimators of MBH.Comment: Accepted for publication at A&
Black hole mass estimates in quasars - A comparative analysis of high- and low-ionization lines
The inter-line comparison between high- and low-ionization emission lines has
yielded a wealth of information on the quasar broad line region (BLR) structure
and dynamics, including perhaps the earliest unambiguous evidence in favor of a
disk + wind structure in radio-quiet quasars. We carried out an analysis of the
CIV 1549 and Hbeta line profiles of 28 Hamburg-ESO high luminosity quasars and
of 48 low-z, low luminosity sources in order to test whether the
high-ionization line CIV 1549 width could be correlated with Hbeta and be used
as a virial broadening estimator. We analyze intermediate- to high-S/N,
moderate resolution optical and NIR spectra covering the redshifted CIV and
H over a broad range of luminosity log L ~ 44 - 48.5 [erg/s] and
redshift (0 - 3), following an approach based on the quasar main sequence. The
present analysis indicates that the line width of CIV 1549 is not immediately
offering a virial broadening estimator equivalent to H. At the same time
a virialized part of the BLR appears to be preserved even at the highest
luminosities. We suggest a correction to FWHM(CIV) for Eddington ratio (using
the CIV blueshift as a proxy) and luminosity effects that can be applied over
more than four dex in luminosity. Great care should be used in estimating
high-L black hole masses from CIV 1549 line width. However, once corrected
FWHM(CIV) values are used, a CIV-based scaling law can yield unbiased MBH
values with respect to the ones based on H with sample standard
deviation ~ 0.3 dex.Comment: 43 pages, 15 Figures, submitted to A&
VLT/ISAAC Spectra of the H-beta Region in Intermediate Redshift Quasars
We present high S/N spectra of the H-beta region in 17 intermediate redshift
(0.85 le z le 2.5) quasars. The spectra represent first results of our campaign
to test the redshift/luminosity robustness of the so-called Eigenvector 1 (E1)
parameter space as developed for low redshift AGN in Sulentic et al. (2000).
The new quasars span the luminosity range -26 ge M_B ge -29 while most of our
low redshift sample (n=215) involve sources in the range -19 ge M_B ge -26. The
high redshift sources show E1 parameter values and domain occupation that are
similar to our low redshift sample supporting earlier findings that E1
parameters are uncorrelated with source luminosity. Elementary accretion theory
can account for a systematic increase of the minimum observed H-beta profile
width with source luminosity. Narrow line Seyfert 1 sources with M_B = -28 show
FWHM(H-beta) as much as 2000 km/s broader than those with M_B = -22. A possible
change in the higher redshift/luminosity sources involves systematically weaker
[OIII]4959,5007 narrow line emission.Comment: 17 pages, 13 figures, accepted by A&A; added references and minor
correction
A New H I Survey of Active Galaxies
We have conducted a new Arecibo survey for H I emission for 113 galaxies with
broad-line (type 1) active galactic nuclei (AGNs) out to recession velocities
as high as 35,000 km/s. The primary aim of the study is to obtain sensitive H I
spectra for a well-defined, uniformly selected sample of active galaxies that
have estimates of their black hole masses in order to investigate correlations
between H I properties and the characteristics of the AGNs. H I emission was
detected in 66 out of the 101 (65%) objects with spectra uncorrupted by radio
frequency interference, among which 45 (68%) have line profiles with adequate
signal-to-noise ratio and sufficiently reliable inclination corrections to
yield robust deprojected rotational velocities. This paper presents the basic
survey products, including an atlas of H I spectra, measurements of H I flux,
line width, profile asymmetry, optical images, optical spectroscopic
parameters, as well as a summary of a number of derived properties pertaining
to the host galaxies. To enlarge our primary sample, we also assemble all
previously published H I measurements of type 1 AGNs for which can can estimate
black hole masses, which total an additional 53 objects. The final
comprehensive compilation of 154 broad-line active galaxies, by far the largest
sample ever studied, forms the basis of our companion paper, which uses the H I
database to explore a number of properties of the AGN host galaxies.Comment: To appear in ApJS; 31 pages. Preprint will full-resolution figures
can be downloaded from http://www.ociw.edu/~lho/preprints/ms1.pd
- …