1,122 research outputs found
Ballistic magnon heat conduction and possible Poiseuille flow in the helimagnetic insulator CuOSeO
We report on the observation of magnon thermal conductivity 70
W/mK near 5 K in the helimagnetic insulator CuOSeO, exceeding that
measured in any other ferromagnet by almost two orders of magnitude. Ballistic,
boundary-limited transport for both magnons and phonons is established below 1
K, and Poiseuille flow of magnons is proposed to explain a magnon mean-free
path substantially exceeding the specimen width for the least defective
specimens in the range 2 K 10 K. These observations establish
CuOSeO as a model system for studying long-wavelength magnon dynamics.Comment: 10pp, 9 figures, accepted PRB (Editor's Suggestion
Linking black-hole growth with host galaxies: The accretion-stellar mass relation and its cosmic evolution
Previous studies suggest that the growth of supermassive black holes (SMBHs)
may be fundamentally related to host-galaxy stellar mass (). To
investigate this SMBH growth- relation in detail, we calculate
long-term SMBH accretion rate as a function of and redshift
[] over ranges of
and . Our
is constrained by high-quality survey data
(GOODS-South, GOODS-North, and COSMOS), and by the stellar mass function and
the X-ray luminosity function. At a given , is
higher at high redshift. This redshift dependence is stronger in more massive
systems (for , is
three decades higher at than at ), possibly due to AGN feedback.
Our results indicate that the ratio between and average
star formation rate () rises toward high at a
given redshift. This dependence on
does not support the scenario that SMBH and galaxy growth are in
lockstep. We calculate SMBH mass history [] based on our
and the from the literature, and
find that the - relation has weak redshift evolution since
. The ratio is higher toward massive galaxies:
it rises from at to at . Our predicted ratio
at high is similar to that observed in local giant ellipticals,
suggesting that SMBH growth from mergers is unlikely to dominate over growth
from accretion.Comment: 27 pages, 21 figures, 2 tables; MNRAS accepte
AGN X-ray variability in the XMM-COSMOS survey
We took advantage of the observations carried out by XMM in the COSMOS field
during 3.5 years, to study the long term variability of a large sample of AGN
(638 sources), in a wide range of redshift (0.1<z<3.5) and X-ray luminosity
(L(2-10)). Both a simple statistical method to asses the
significance of variability, and the Normalized Excess Variance
() parameter, where used to obtain a quantitative measurement
of the variability. Variability is found to be prevalent in most AGN, whenever
we have good statistic to measure it, and no significant differences between
type-1 and type-2 AGN were found. A flat (slope -0.23+/-0.03) anti-correlation
between and X-ray luminosity is found, when significantly
variable sources are considered all together. When divided in three redshift
bins, the anti-correlation becomes stronger and evolving with z, with higher
redshift AGN being more variable. We prove however that this effect is due to
the pre-selection of variable sources: considering all the sources with
available measurement, the evolution in redshift disappears.
For the first time we were also able to study the long term X-ray variability
as a function of and Eddington ratio, for a large sample of AGN
spanning a wide range of redshift. An anti-correlation between
and is found, with the same slope of the
anti-correlation between and X-ray luminosity, suggesting
that the latter can be a byproduct of the former one. No clear correlation is
found between and the Eddington ratio in our sample.
Finally, no correlation is found between the X-ray and the
optical variability.Comment: 14 Pages, 13 figures. Accepted to the Astrophysical Journal on
December 6, 201
Incommensurate magnetism near quantum criticality in CeNiAsO
Two phase transitions in the tetragonal strongly correlated electron system
CeNiAsO were probed by neutron scattering and zero field muon spin rotation.
For = 8.7(3) K, a second order phase transition yields an
incommensurate spin density wave with wave vector . For = 7.6(3) K, we find co-planar commensurate order with a
moment of , reduced to of the saturation moment of the
Kramers doublet ground state, which we establish by
inelastic neutron scattering. Muon spin rotation in
shows the commensurate order only exists for x 0.1 so the transition at
= 0.4(1) is from an incommensurate longitudinal spin density wave to a
paramagnetic Fermi liquid
A wide angle tail radio galaxy in the COSMOS field: evidence for cluster formation
We have identified a complex galaxy cluster system in the COSMOS field via a
wide angle tail (WAT) radio galaxy consistent with the idea that WAT galaxies
can be used as tracers of clusters. The WAT galaxy, CWAT-01, is coincident with
an elliptical galaxy resolved in the HST-ACS image. Using the COSMOS
multiwavelength data set, we derive the radio properties of CWAT-01 and use the
optical and X-ray data to investigate its host environment. The cluster hosting
CWAT-01 is part of a larger assembly consisting of a minimum of four X-ray
luminous clusters within ~2 Mpc distance. We apply hydrodynamical models that
combine ram pressure and buoyancy forces on CWAT-01. These models explain the
shape of the radio jets only if the galaxy's velocity relative to the
intra-cluster medium (ICM) is in the range of about 300-550 km/s which is
higher than expected for brightest cluster galaxies (BCGs) in relaxed systems.
This indicates that the CWAT-01 host cluster is not relaxed, but is possibly
dynamically young. We argue that such a velocity could have been induced
through subcluster merger within the CWAT-01 parent cluster and/or
cluster-cluster interactions. Our results strongly indicate that we are
witnessing the formation of a large cluster from an assembly of multiple
clusters, consistent with the hierarchical scenario of structure formation. We
estimate the total mass of the final cluster to be approximately 20% of the
mass of the Coma cluster.Comment: 18 pages, 13 figures; accepted for publication in ApJS, COSMOS
special issue; added color figure (Fig. 13) which was previously unavailabl
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping Project : biases in z > 1.46 redshifts due to quasar diversity
We use the coadded spectra of 32 epochs of Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Reverberation Mapping Project observations of 482 quasars with z > 1.46 to highlight systematic biases in the SDSS- and Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS)-pipeline redshifts due to the natural diversity of quasar properties. We investigate the characteristics of this bias by comparing the BOSS-pipeline redshifts to an estimate from the centroid of He ii λ1640. He ii has a low equivalent width but is often well-defined in high-S/N spectra, does not suffer from self-absorption, and has a narrow component which, when present (the case for about half of our sources), produces a redshift estimate that, on average, is consistent with that determined from [O ii] to within the He ii and [O ii] centroid measurement uncertainties. The large redshift differences of ∼1000 km s-1, on average, between the BOSS-pipeline and He ii-centroid redshifts, suggest there are significant biases in a portion of BOSS quasar redshift measurements. Adopting the He ii-based redshifts shows that C iv does not exhibit a ubiquitous blueshift for all quasars, given the precision probed by our measurements. Instead, we find a distribution of C iv-centroid blueshifts across our sample, with a dynamic range that (i) is wider than that previously reported for this line, and (ii) spans C iv centroids from those consistent with the systemic redshift to those with significant blueshifts of thousands of kilometers per second. These results have significant implications for measurement and use of high-redshift quasar properties and redshifts, and studies based thereon.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
The Mean Star-Forming Properties of QSO Host Galaxies
Quasi-stellar objects (QSOs) occur in galaxies in which supermassive black
holes (SMBHs) are growing substantially through rapid accretion of gas. Many
popular models of the co-evolutionary growth of galaxies and SMBHs predict that
QSOs are also sites of substantial recent star formation, mediated by important
processes, such as major mergers, which rapidly transform the nature of
galaxies. A detailed study of the star-forming properties of QSOs is a critical
test of such models. We present a far-infrared Herschel/PACS study of the mean
star formation rate (SFR) of a sample of spectroscopically observed QSOs to z~2
from the COSMOS extragalactic survey. This is the largest sample to date of
moderately luminous AGNs studied using uniform, deep far-infrared photometry.
We study trends of the mean SFR with redshift, black hole mass, nuclear
bolometric luminosity and specific accretion rate (Eddington ratio). To
minimize systematics, we have undertaken a uniform determination of SMBH
properties, as well as an analysis of important selection effects within
spectroscopic QSO samples that influence the interpretation of SFR trends. We
find that the mean SFRs of these QSOs are consistent with those of normal
massive star-forming galaxies with a fixed scaling between SMBH and galaxy mass
at all redshifts. No strong enhancement in SFR is found even among the most
rapidly accreting systems, at odds with several co-evolutionary models.
Finally, we consider the qualitative effects on mean SFR trends from different
assumptions about the star-forming properties of QSO hosts and redshift
evolution of the SMBH-galaxy relationship. While limited currently by
uncertainties, valuable constraints on AGN-galaxy co-evolution can emerge from
our approach.Comment: 10 figures, 1 table; accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Identifying Luminous AGN in Deep Surveys: Revised IRAC Selection Criteria
Spitzer IRAC selection is a powerful tool for identifying luminous AGN. For
deep IRAC data, however, the AGN selection wedges currently in use are heavily
contaminated by star-forming galaxies, especially at high redshift. Using the
large samples of luminous AGN and high-redshift star-forming galaxies in
COSMOS, we redefine the AGN selection criteria for use in deep IRAC surveys.
The new IRAC criteria are designed to be both highly complete and reliable, and
incorporate the best aspects of the current AGN selection wedges and of
infrared power-law selection while excluding high redshift star-forming
galaxies selected via the BzK, DRG, LBG, and SMG criteria. At QSO-luminosities
of log L(2-10 keV) (ergs/s) > 44, the new IRAC criteria recover 75% of the hard
X-ray and IRAC-detected XMM-COSMOS sample, yet only 38% of the IRAC AGN
candidates have X-ray counterparts, a fraction that rises to 52% in regions
with Chandra exposures of 50-160 ks. X-ray stacking of the individually X-ray
non-detected AGN candidates leads to a hard X-ray signal indicative of heavily
obscured to mildly Compton-thick obscuration (log N_H (cm^-2) = 23.5 +/- 0.4).
While IRAC selection recovers a substantial fraction of luminous unobscured and
obscured AGN, it is incomplete to low-luminosity and host-dominated AGN.Comment: 22 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ, full
resolution version available at http://www.stsci.edu/~donley/iragn_paper
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