1,357 research outputs found

    Low-luminosity AGN and Normal Galaxies

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    Low-luminosity AGN (with X-ray luminosity < 1e42 ergs/s) far outnumber ordinary AGN, and are therefore perhaps more relevant to our understanding of AGN phenomena and the relationship between AGN and host galaxies. Many normal galaxies harbor LINER and starburst nuclei, which, together with LLAGN, are a class of ``low-activity'' galaxies that have a number of surprisingly similar X-ray characteristics, despite their heterogenous optical classification. This strongly supports the hypothesis of an AGN-starburst connection. Further, X-ray observations of normal galaxies without starburst or AGN-like activity in their nuclei offer opportunities to study populations of X-ray binaries, HII regions, and warm or hot ISM under different conditions than is often the case in the Milky Way. The results of recent X-ray observations of these types of galaxies are reviewed, and what we hope to learn about both nearby and high redshift galaxies of each type from observations with forthcoming and planned satellites is discussed.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures. Invited review at Bologna X-ray Astronomy 1999. To appear in Astrophysical Letters and Communication

    The Statistical Properties of Galaxies Containing ULXs

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    We present a statistical analysis of the properties of galaxies containing ultraluminous X-ray objects (ULXs). Our primary goal is to establish the fraction of galaxies containing a ULX as a function of ULX luminosity. Our sample is based on ROSAT HRI observations of galaxies. We find that ~ 12% of galaxies contain at least one ULX with L_X > 10^39 erg/s and ~ 1% of galaxies contain at least one ULX with L_X > 10^40 erg/s. These ULX frequencies are lower limits since ROSAT HRI observation would miss absorbed ULXs (i.e., with N_H >~ 10^21 cm^-2) and those within ~ 10" of the nucleus (due to the positional error circle of the ROSAT HRI). The Hubble type distribution of galaxies with a ULX differs significantly from the distribution of types for nearby RC3 galaxies, but does not differ significantly from the galaxy type distribution of galaxies observed by the HRI in general. We find no increase in the mean FIR luminosity or FIR / K band luminosity ratio for galaxies with a ULX relative to galaxies observed by the HRI in general, however this result is also most likely biased by the soft bandpass of the HRI and the relatively low number of high SFR galaxies observed by the HRI with enough sensitivity to detect a ULX.Comment: Accepted by Apj. 5 pages with 4 figures formatted using emulateapj. Version with just b/w figures available at http://www.pha.jhu.edu/~ptak/paper

    SHEEP: The Search for the High Energy Extragalactic Population

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    We present the SHEEP survey for serendipitously-detected hard X-ray sources in ASCA GIS images. In a survey area of ∼40\sim 40 deg2^{2}, 69 sources were detected in the 5-10 keV band to a limiting flux of ∼10−13\sim 10^{-13} erg cm−2^{-2} s−1^{-1}. The number counts agree with those obtained by the similar BeppoSAX HELLAS survey, and both are in close agreement with ASCA and BeppoSAX 2-10 keV surveys. Spectral analysis of the SHEEP sample reveals that the 2-10 and 5-10 keV surveys do not sample the same populations, however, as we find considerably harder spectra, with an average Γ∼1.0\Gamma\sim1.0 assuming no absorption. The implication is that the agreement in the number counts is coincidental, with the 5-10 keV surveys gaining approximately as many hard sources as they lose soft ones, when compared to the 2-10 keV surveys. This is hard to reconcile with standard AGN ``population synthesis'' models for the X-ray background, which posit the existence of a large population of absorbed sources. We find no evidence of the population hardening at faint fluxes, with the exception that the few very brightest objects are anomalously soft. 53 of the SHEEP sources have been covered by ROSAT in the pointed phase. Of these 32 were detected. An additional 3 were detected in the RASS. As expected the sources detected with ROSAT are systematically softer than those detected with ASCA alone, and of the sample as a whole (truncated).Comment: 36 pages, 7 figs, to appear in Ap
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