232 research outputs found
A Local Baseline of the Black Hole Mass Scaling Relations for Active Galaxies. I. Methodology and Results of Pilot Study
We present high-quality Keck/LRIS longslit spectroscopy of a pilot sample of
25 local active galaxies selected from the SDSS (0.0210^7 M_sun) to
study the relations between black hole mass (MBH) and host-galaxy properties.
We determine stellar kinematics of the host galaxy, deriving stellar-velocity
dispersion profiles and rotation curves from three spectral regions (including
CaH&K, MgIb triplet, and CaII triplet). In addition, we perform surface
photometry on SDSS images, using a newly developed code for joint multi-band
analysis. BH masses are estimated from the width of the Hbeta emission line and
the host-galaxy free 5100A AGN luminosity. Combining results from spectroscopy
and imaging allows us to study four MBH scaling relations: MBH-sigma,
MBH-L(sph), MBH-M(sph,*), MBH-M(sph,dyn). We find the following results. First,
stellar-velocity dispersions determined from aperture spectra (e.g. SDSS fiber
spectra or unresolved data from distant galaxies) can be biased, depending on
aperture size, AGN contamination, and host-galaxy morphology. However, such a
bias cannot explain the offset seen in the MBH-sigma relation at higher
redshifts. Second, while the CaT region is the cleanest to determine
stellar-velocity dispersions, both the MgIb region, corrected for FeII
emission, and the CaHK region, although often swamped by the AGN powerlaw
continuum and emission lines, can give results accurate to within a few
percent. Third, the MBH scaling relations of our pilot sample agree in slope
and scatter with those of other local active and inactive galaxies. In the next
papers of the series we will quantify the scaling relations, exploiting the
full sample of ~100 objects.Comment: 28 pages, 19 figures. Final version, accepted for publication in The
Astrophysical Journal (ApJ, 726, 59
The Relation between Black Hole Mass and Host Spheroid Stellar Mass out to z~2
We combine Hubble Space Telescope images from the Great Observatories Origins
Deep Survey with archival Very Large Telescope and Keck spectra of a sample of
11 X-ray selected broad-line active galactic nuclei in the redshift range 1<z<2
to study the black hole mass - stellar mass relation out to a lookback time of
10 Gyrs. Stellar masses of the spheroidal component are derived from
multi-filter surface photometry. Black hole masses are estimated from the width
of the broad MgII emission line and the 3000A nuclear luminosity. Comparing
with a uniformly measured local sample and taking into account selection
effects, we find evolution in the form M_BH/M_spheroid ~ (1+z)^(1.96+/-0.55),
in agreement with our earlier studies based on spheroid luminosity. However,
this result is more accurate because it does not require a correction for
luminosity evolution and therefore avoids the related and dominant systematic
uncertainty. We also measure total stellar masses. Combining our sample with
data from the literature, we find M_BH/M_host ~ (1+z)^(1.15+/-0.15), consistent
with the hypothesis that black holes (in the range M_BH ~ 10^8-9 M_sun) predate
the formation of their host galaxies. Roughly one third of our objects reside
in spiral galaxies; none of the host galaxies reveal signs of interaction or
major merger activity. Combined with the slower evolution in host stellar
masses compared to spheroid stellar masses, our results indicate that secular
evolution or minor mergers play a non-negligible role in growing both BHs and
spheroids.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures. Final version, accepted for publication in The
Astrophysical Journa
The Cataclysmic Variable CW 1045+525: A Secondary-Dominated Dwarf Nova?
We present spectroscopic and photometric observations of the cataclysmic variable CW 1045+525. Both the optical spectrum and the photometric lightcurve show a strong contribution of a K5V–M0V secondary. We derive an orbital period Porb = 0.271278(1) d by measuring the radial velocities of the absorption lines of the secondary. The period and spectral type of the secondary suggest a distance of 350–700 pc. There is evidence for additional sources of line- and continuum emission, but no direct evidence of an accretion disc. We discuss several scenarios for the nature of CW 1045+525 on the basis of our results, finding a dwarf nova classification to be the most probable, although not completely satisfying, explanation for the observed characteristics
Cosmic Evolution of Black Holes and Spheroids. IV. The BH Mass - Spheroid Luminosity Relation
From high-resolution images of 23 Seyfert-1 galaxies at z=0.36 and z=0.57
obtained with the Near Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer on board
the Hubble Space Telescope (HST), we determine host-galaxy morphology, nuclear
luminosity, total host-galaxy luminosity and spheroid luminosity. Keck
spectroscopy is used to estimate black hole mass (M_BH). We study the cosmic
evolution of the M_BH-spheroid luminosity (L_sph) relation. In combination with
our previous work, totaling 40 Seyfert-1 galaxies, the covered range in BH mass
is substantially increased, allowing us to determine for the first time
intrinsic scatter and correct evolutionary trends for selection effects. We
re-analyze archival HST images of 19 local reverberation-mapped active galaxies
to match the procedure adopted at intermediate redshift. Correcting spheroid
luminosity for passive luminosity evolution and taking into account selection
effects, we determine that at fixed present-day V-band spheroid luminosity,
M_BH/L_sph \propto (1+z)^(2.8+/-1.2). When including a sample of 44 quasars out
to z=4.5 taken from the literature, with luminosity and BH mass corrected to a
self-consistent calibration, we extend the BH mass range to over two orders of
magnitude, resulting in M_BH/L_sph \propto (1+z)^(1.4+/-0.2). The intrinsic
scatter of the relation, assumed constant with redshift, is 0.3+/-0.1 dex (<0.6
dex at 95% CL). The evolutionary trend suggests that BH growth precedes
spheroid assembly. Interestingly, the M_BH-total host-galaxy luminosity
relation is apparently non-evolving. It hints at either a more fundamental
relation or that the spheroid grows by a redistribution of stars. However, the
high-z sample does not follow this relation, indicating that major mergers may
play the dominant role in growing spheroids above z~1.Comment: 39 pages, 11 figures. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
Spatially-Resolved Spectra of the "Teacup" AGN: Tracing the History of a Dying Quasar
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Galaxy Zoo project has revealed a number
of spectacular galaxies possessing Extended Emission-Line Regions (EELRs), the
most famous being Hanny's Voorwerp galaxy. We present another EELR object
discovered in the SDSS endeavor: the Teacup Active Galactic Nucleus (AGN),
nicknamed for its EELR, which has a handle like structure protruding 15 kpc
into the northeast quadrant of the galaxy. We analyze physical conditions of
this galaxy with long-slit ground based spectroscopy from Lowell, Lick, and
KPNO observatories. With the Lowell 1.8m Perkin's telescope we took multiple
observations at different offset positions, allowing us to recover spatially
resolved spectra across the galaxy. Line diagnostics indicate the ionized gas
is photoionized primarily by the AGN. Additionally we are able to derive the
hydrogen density from the [S II] 6716/6731 ratio. We generated two-component
photoionization models for each spatially resolved Lowell spectrum. These
models allow us to calculate the AGN bolometric luminosity seen by the gas at
different radii from the nuclear center of the Teacup. Our results show a drop
in bolometric luminosity by more than two orders of magnitude from the EELR to
the nucleus, suggesting that the AGN has decreased in luminosity by this amount
in a continuous fashion over 46,000 years, supporting the case for a dying AGN
in this galaxy independent of any IR based evidence. We demonstrate that
spatially resolved photoionization modeling could be applied to EELRs to
investigate long time scale variability.Comment: 38 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
Cosmic Evolution of Black Holes and Spheroids. V. The Relation Between Black Hole Mass and Host Galaxy Luminosity for a Sample of 79 Active Galaxies
We investigate the cosmic evolution of the black hole (BH) mass -- bulge
luminosity relation using a sample of 52 active galaxies at and
in the BH mass range of . By consistently
applying multi-component spectral and structural decomposition to high-quality
Keck spectra and high-resolution HST images, BH masses () are
estimated using the H broad emission line combined with the 5100 \AA\
nuclear luminosity, and bulge luminosities () are derived from
surface photometry. Comparing the resulting relation
to local active galaxies and taking into account selection effects, we find
evolution of the form with
, consistent with BH growth preceding that of the host
galaxies. Including an additional sample of 27 active galaxies with
taken from the literature and measured in a consistent way, we obtain
for the relation and
for the --total host galaxy luminosity () relation. The results strengthen the findings from our previous studies
and provide additional evidence for host-galaxy bulge growth being dominated by
disk-to-bulge transformation via minor mergers and/or disk instabilities.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. 33 pages, 12 figures, 4 table
Galaxy Zoo Green Peas: discovery of a class of compact extremely star-forming galaxies
‘The definitive version is available at www3.interscience.wiley.com '. Copyright Royal Astronomical Society. DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2009.15383.xWe investigate a class of rapidly growing emission line galaxies, known as 'Green Peas', first noted by volunteers in the Galaxy Zoo project because of their peculiar bright green colour and small size, unresolved in Sloan Digital Sky Survey imaging. Their appearance is due to very strong optical emission lines, namely [O iii]λ5007 Å, with an unusually large equivalent width of up to ∼1000 Å. We discuss a well-defined sample of 251 colour-selected objects, most of which are strongly star forming, although there are some active galactic nuclei interlopers including eight newly discovered narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxies. The star-forming Peas are low-mass galaxies (M∼ 108.5–1010 M⊙) with high star formation rates (∼10 M⊙ yr−1) , low metallicities (log[O/H]+ 12 ∼ 8.7) and low reddening [ E(B−V) ≤ 0.25 ] and they reside in low-density environments. They have some of the highest specific star formation rates (up to ∼10−8 yr−1 ) seen in the local Universe, yielding doubling times for their stellar mass of hundreds of Myr. The few star-forming Peas with Hubble Space Telescope imaging appear to have several clumps of bright star-forming regions and low surface density features that may indicate recent or ongoing mergers. The Peas are similar in size, mass, luminosity and metallicity to luminous blue compact galaxies. They are also similar to high-redshift ultraviolet-luminous galaxies, e.g. Lyman-break galaxies and Lyα emitters, and therefore provide a local laboratory with which to study the extreme star formation processes that occur in high-redshift galaxies. Studying starbursting galaxies as a function of redshift is essential to understanding the build up of stellar mass in the Universe.Peer reviewe
A Search for Binary Active Galactic Nuclei: Double-Peaked [OIII] AGN in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
We present AGN from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) having double-peaked
profiles of [OIII] 5007,4959 and other narrow emission-lines, motivated by the
prospect of finding candidate binary AGN. These objects were identified by
means of a visual examination of 21,592 quasars at z < 0.7 in SDSS Data Release
7 (DR7). Of the spectra with adequate signal-to-noise, 148 spectra exhibit a
double-peaked [OIII] profile. Of these, 86 are Type 1 AGN and 62 are Type 2
AGN. Only two give the appearance of possibly being optically resolved double
AGN in the SDSS images, but many show close companions or signs of recent
interaction. Radio-detected quasars are three times more likely to exhibit a
double-peaked [OIII] profile than quasars with no detected radio flux,
suggesting a role for jet interactions in producing the double-peaked profiles.
Of the 66 broad line (Type 1) AGN that are undetected in the FIRST survey, 0.9%
show double peaked [OIII] profiles. We discuss statistical tests of the nature
of the double-peaked objects. Further study is needed to determine which of
them are binary AGN rather than disturbed narrow line regions, and how many
additional binaries may remain undetected because of insufficient line-of-sight
velocity splitting. Previous studies indicate that 0.1% of SDSS quasars are
spatially resolved binaries, with typical spacings of ~10 to 100 kpc. If a
substantial fraction of the double-peaked objects are indeed binaries, then our
results imply that binaries occur more frequently at smaller separations (< 10
kpc). This suggests that simultaneous fueling of both black holes is more
common as the binary orbit decays through these spacings.Comment: 33 pages, 5 figures, LaTeX. Major revisions. Accepted for publication
in ApJ
A local baseline of the black hole mass scaling relations for active galaxies. III. The MBH-σ relation
We create a baseline of the black hole (BH) mass ()—stellar-velocity dispersion (σ) relation for active galaxies, using a sample of 66 local () Seyfert-1 galaxies, selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). Analysis of SDSS images yields AGN luminosities free of host-galaxy contamination, and morphological classification. 51/66 galaxies have spiral morphology. Out of these, 28 bulges have Sérsic index and are considered candidate pseudo-bulges, with eight being definite pseudo-bulges based on multiple classification criteria met. Only 4/66 galaxies show signs of interaction/merging. High signal-to-noise ratio Keck spectra provide the width of the broad Hβ emission line free of Fe ii emission and stellar absorption. AGN luminosity and Hβ line widths are used to estimate . The Keck-based spatially resolved kinematics is used to determine stellar-velocity dispersion within the spheroid effective radius (). We find that σ can vary on average by up to 40% across definitions commonly used in the literature, emphasizing the importance of using self-consistent definitions in comparisons and evolutionary studies. The –σ relation for our Seyfert-1 galaxy sample has the same intercept and scatter as that of reverberation-mapped AGNs as well as that of quiescent galaxies, consistent with the hypothesis that our single epoch estimator and sample selection function do not introduce significant biases. Barred galaxies, merging galaxies, and those hosting pseudo-bulges do not represent outliers in the –σ relation. This is in contrast with previous work, although no firm conclusion can be drawn on this matter due to the small sample size and limited resolution of the SDSS images
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