217 research outputs found

    Optical Spectroscopy of the unusual galaxy J2310-43

    Full text link
    We present and discuss new spectroscopic observations of the unusual galaxy J2310-43. The observations cover a wide wavelength range, from 3700 A to 9800 A allowing the study of both the regions where H alpha and the Ca II ``contrast'' are expected. No evidence for H alpha in emission is found and we thus confirm the absence of emission lines in the spectrum of J2310-43, ruling out the possibility that it may host a Seyfert nucleus. The CaII break is clearly detected and the value of the contrast (38 +/-4 %) is intermediate between that of a typical elliptical galaxy (about 50 %) and that of a BL Lac object (<25 %). This result imposes limits on the intensity of a possible non-stellar continuum and, in the light of the radio and X-ray loudness of the source, draws further attention to the problem of the recognition of a BL Lac object. Objects like J2310-43 may be more common than previously recognized, and begin to emerge in surveys of radio-emitting X-ray sources.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure; to be published in The Astronomical Journa

    The REX survey: a search for Radio Emitting X-ray sources

    Get PDF
    We present the scientific goals, the strategy and the first results of the REX project, an effort aimed at creating a sizable and statistically complete sample of Radio Emitting X-ray sources (REX) using the available data from a VLA survey and the ROSAT PSPC archive. Through a positional cross-correlation of the two data sets we have derived a sample of about 1600 REX. Among the 393 REX identified so far a high fraction is represented by AGNs, typically radio loud QSOs and BL Lacs. The remaining sources are galaxies, typically radio galaxies isolated or in cluster. Thanks to the low flux limits in the radio and in the X-ray band and the large area of sky covered by the survey, we intend to derive a new complete and unbiased sample of BL Lacs which will contain both ``RBL'' and ``XBL'' type objects. In this way, the apparent dichotomy resulting from the current samples of BL Lacs will be directly analyzed in a unique sample. Moreover, the high number of BL Lacs expected in the REX sample (about 200) will allow an accurate estimate of their statistical properties. To date, we have discovered 15 new BL Lacs and 11 BL Lac candidates with optical properties intermediate between those of a typical elliptical galaxy and those of a typical BL Lac object. These objects could harbour weak sources of non-thermal continuum in their nuclei and, if confirmed, they could represent the faint tail of the BL Lac population. The existence of such ``weak'' BL Lacs is matter of discussion in recent literature and could lead to a re-assessment of the defining criteria of a BL Lac and, consequently, to a revision of their cosmological and statistical properties.Comment: 30 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication to Ap

    Emission Line AGNs from the REX survey: Results from optical spectroscopy

    Get PDF
    We present 71 Emission Line objects selected from the REX survey. Except for 3 of them, for which the presence of an active nucleus is dubious, all these sources are Active Galactic Nuclei (QSOs, Seyfert galaxies, emission line radiogalaxies). In addition, we present the spectra of other 19 AGNs included in a preliminary version of the REX catalog but not in the final one. The majority (80) of the 90 sources presented in this paper is newly discovered. Finally, we present the general properties in the radio and in the X-ray band of all the AGNs discovered so far in the REX survey.Comment: 27 pages. To be published in Astronomy and Astrophysics, Supplement Series. Better quality figures can be asked to the autho

    X-ray Line Emitting Objects in XMM-Newton Observations: the Tip of the Iceberg

    Full text link
    We present preliminary results from a novel search for X-ray Line Emitting Objects (XLEOs) in XMM-Newton images. Three sources have been detected in a test-run analysis of 13 XMM-Newton observations. The three objects found are most likely extremely absorbed AGN characterized by a column density NH~10^24cm^-2. Their redshift has been directly determined from the X-ray data, by interpreting the detected emission line as the 6.4 keV Fe line. The measured equivalent width of the X-ray line is, in all three cases, several keV. This pilot study demonstrates the success of our search method and implies that a large sample of XLEOs can be obtained from the public XMM-Newton data archive.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
    • …
    corecore