127 research outputs found
RX J1643.7+3402: a new bright cataclysmic variable
We report the discovery of a new bright (V12.6) cataclysmic variable star identified with the ROSAT X-ray source RX J1643.7+3402. Spectroscopic and photometric observations show it to be a novalike variable sharing some of the characteristics of the SW Sex sub-class of novalike CVs. The spectroscopic period may be either 2\fh575 or 2\fh885, within the period "gap." A photometric modulation with a probable period of 2\fh595 and an amplitude of 0.1 mag in V is present on most nights and could be either a "positive" or a "negative" superhump modulation (depending on the exact spectroscopic period), indicating the presence of a precessing accretion disk in this system. Rapid variations of 0.1 to 0.2 mag amplitude in V repeat with a time scale of 15 min
The optical emission line spectrum of Mark 110
We analyse in detail the rich emission line spectrum of Mark 110 to determine
the physical conditions in the nucleus of this object, a peculiar NLS1 without
any detectable Fe II emission associated with the broad line region and with a
line ratio unusually large for a NLS1. We use 24 spectra
obtained with the Marcario Low Resolution Spectrograph attached at the prime
focus of the 9.2 m Hobby-Eberly telescope at the McDonald observatory. We
fitted the spectrum by identifying all the emission lines (about 220) detected
in the wavelength range 4200-6900 \AA (at rest). The narrow emission lines are
probably produced in a region with a density gradient in the range
10 cm with a rather high column density (5
cm). In addition to a narrow line system, three major broad line systems
with different line velocity and width are required. We confirm the absence of
broad Fe II emission lines. We speculate that Mark 110 is in fact a BLS1 with
relatively "narrow" broad lines but with a BH mass large enough compared to its
luminosity to have a lower than Eddington luminosity.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, accepted by A&
FE II EMISSION IN AGN
RESUMEN El espectroĂłptico de las galaxias Seyfert 1 muestra una gran variedad de lĂneas de emisiĂłn producidas por FeII. Damos tres ejemplos e investigamos la formaciĂłn de estas lĂneas con el fin de determinar las condiciones fĂsicas de las regiones en donde se emiten. ABSTRACT The optical spectrum of Seyfert 1s reveals a great variety of Fe II emission lines. We give three examples and investigate the formation of these lines in order to determine the physical conditions of the emission regions
Optically bright Active Galactic Nuclei in the ROSAT-Faint Source Catalogue
To build a large, optically bright, X-ray selected AGN sample we have
correlated the ROSAT-FSC catalogue of X-ray sources with the USNO catalogue
limited to objects brighter than O=16.5 and then with the APS database. Each of
the 3,212 coincidences was classified using the slitless Hamburg spectra. 493
objects were found to be extended and 2,719 starlike. Using both the extended
objects and the galaxies known from published catalogues we built up a sample
of 185 galaxies with O_APS < 17.0 mag, which are high-probability counterparts
of RASS-FSC X-ray sources. 130 galaxies have a redshift from the literature and
for another 34 we obtained new spectra. The fraction of Seyfert galaxies in
this sample is 20 %. To select a corresponding sample of 144 high-probability
counterparts among the starlike sources we searched for very blue objects in an
APS-based color-magnitude diagram. Forty-one were already known AGN and for
another 91 objects we obtained new spectra, yielding 42 new AGN, increasing
their number in the sample to 83. This confirms that surveys of bright QSOs are
still significantly incomplete. On the other hand we find that, at a flux limit
of 0.02 count /-1 and at this magnitude, only 40 % of all QSOs are detected by
ROSAT.Comment: 17 pages, 16 figures, accepted by A&
Diagnostics of the structure of AGN's broad line regions with reverberation mapping data: confirmation of the two-component broad line region model
We re-examine the ten Reverberation Mapping (RM) sources with public data
based on the two-component model of the Broad Line Region (BLR). In fitting
their broad H-beta lines, six of them only need one Gaussian component, one of
them has a double-peak profile, one has an irregular profile, and only two of
them need two components, i.e., a Very Broad Gaussian Component (VBGC) and an
Inter-Mediate Gaussian Component (IMGC). The Gaussian components are assumed to
come from two distinct regions in the two-component model; they are Very Broad
Line Region (VBLR) and Inter-Mediate Line region (IMLR). The two sources with a
two-component profile are Mrk 509 and NGC 4051. The time lags of the two
components of both sources satisfy ,
where and are the lags of the two components while
and represent the mean gas velocities of the two regions,
supporting the two-component model of the BLR of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN).
The fact that most of these ten sources only have the VBGC confirms the
assumption that RM mainly measures the radius of the VBLR; consequently, the
radius obtained from the R-L relationship mainly represent the radius of VBLR.
Moreover, NGC 4051, with a lag of about 5 days in the one component model, is
an outlier on the R-L relationship as shown in Kaspi et al. (2005); however
this problem disappears in our two-component model with lags of about 2 and 6
days for the VBGC and IMGC, respectively.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in the Special Issue of
Science in China (G) "Astrophysics of Black holes and Related Compact
Objects
The emission spectrum of the strong Fe II emitter BAL Seyfert 1 galaxy IRAS 07598+6508
The narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxy IRAS 07598+6508 is known to be a stong Fe II
emitter. The analysis of several high S/N ratio spectra shows that its spectrum
is dominated by a relatively narrow "broad line" region (1 780 km s
FWHM) emitting not only Fe II, but also Ti II and Cr II lines. Although we were
unable to find a completely satisfactory physical model, we got the best
agreement with the observations with collisional rather than radiative models,
with a high density (n=10 cm), a high column density
(N=10 cm) and a microturbulence of 100 km s. This
BLR is qualitatively similar to the one observed in I Zw 1. We have not found
traces in IRAS 07598+6508 of the narrow line regions found in I Zw 1.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, accepted by A&
The unusual emission line spectrum of IZw1
Most Seyfert 1s show strong Fe II lines in their spectrum having the velocity
and width of the broad emission lines. To remove the Fe II contribution in
these objects, an accurate template is necessary. We used very high
signal-to-noise, medium resolution archive optical spectra of I Zw 1 to build
such a template.
I Zw 1 is a bright narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxy. As such it is well suited
for a detailed analysis of its emission line spectrum. Furthermore it is known
to have a very peculiar spectrum with, in addition to the usual broad and
narrow line regions, two emission regions emitting broad and blue shifted [O
III] lines making it a peculiarly interesting object. While analysing the
spectra, we found that the narrow-line region is, unlike the NLR of most
Seyfert 1 galaxies, a very low excitation region dominated by both permitted
and forbidden Fe II lines. It is very similar to the emission spectrum of a
blob in Carinae which is a low temperature (T6 500 K),
relatively high density (N=10 cm) cloud. The Fe II lines
in this cloud are mainly due to pumping via the stellar continuum radiation
field (Verner et al. \cite{verner02}). We did not succeed in modelling the
spectrum of the broad-line region, and we suggest that a non radiative heating
mechanism increases the temperature in the excited H I region, thus providing
the necessary additional excitation of the Fe II lines. For the low-excitation
narrow-line region, we are able to settle boundaries to the physical conditions
accounting for the forbidden and permitted Fe II lines (10N cm; 10U).Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures, 10 tables, 1 ascii file, accepted in A&
On the nature of the FBS blue stellar objects and the completeness of the Bright Quasar Survey. II
In Paper I (Mickaelian et al. 1999), we compared the surface density of QSOs
in the Bright Quasar Survey (BQS) and in the First Byurakan Survey (FBS) and
concluded that the completeness of the BQS is of the order of 70% rather than
30-50% as suggested by several authors. A number of new observations recently
became available, allowing a re-evaluation of this completeness. We now obtain
a surface density of QSOs brighter than B = 16.16 in a subarea of the FBS
covering ~2250 deg^2, equal to 0.012 deg^-2 (26 QSOs), implying a completeness
of 53+/-10%.Comment: LaTeX 2e, 11 pages, 3 tables and 3 figures (included in text). To
appear in Astrophysics. Uses a modified aaspp4.sty (my_aaspp4.sty), included
in packag
A Multi-Epoch VLBI Survey of the Kinematics of CJF Sources; Part I: Model-Fit Parameters and Maps
Context: This is the first of a series of papers presenting VLBI observations
of the 293 Caltech-Jodrell Bank Flat-Spectrum (hereafter CJF) sources and their
analysis. Aims: One of the major goals of the CJF is to make a statistical
study of the apparent velocities of the sources. Methods: We have conducted
global VLBI and VLBA observations at 5 GHz since 1990, accumulating thirteen
separate observing campaigns. Results: We present here an overview of the
observations, give details of the data reduction and present the source
parameters resulting from a model-fitting procedure. For every source at every
observing epoch, an image is shown, built up by restoring the model-fitted
components, convolved with the clean beam, into the residual image, which was
made by Fourier transforming the visibility data after first subtracting the
model-fitted components in the uv-plane. Overplotted we show symbols to
represent the model components. Conclusions: We have produced VLBI images of
all but 5 of the 293 sources in the complete CJF sample at several epochs and
investigated the kinematics of 266 AGN.Comment: Figure 1 and Table 2 are only available in electronic form at the CDS
and soon at http://www.mpifr-bonn.mpg.de/staff/sbritzen/cjf.htm
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