312 research outputs found
Discovery of a Jet-Like Structure at the High Redshift QSO CXOMP J084128.3+131107
The Chandra Multiwavelength Project (ChaMP) has discovered a jet-like
structure associated with a newly recognized QSO at redshift z=1.866. The
system was 9.4 arcmin off-axis during an observation of 3C 207. Although
significantly distorted by the mirror PSF, we use both a raytrace and a nearby
bright point source to show that the X-ray image must arise from some
combination of point and extended sources, or else from a minimum of three
distinct point sources. We favor the former situation, as three unrelated
sources would have a small probability of occurring by chance in such a close
alignment. We show that interpretation as a jet emitting X-rays via inverse
Compton (IC) scattering on the cosmic microwave background (CMB) is plausible.
This would be a surprising and unique discovery of a radio-quiet QSO with an
X-ray jet, since we have obtained upper limits of 100 microJy on the QSO
emission at 8.46 GHz, and limits of 200 microJy for emission from the putative
jet.Comment: 12 pages including 4 figures. Accepted for publication by ApJ Letter
The Brightest Cluster Galaxy in Abell 85: The Largest Core Known so far
We have found that the brightest cluster galaxy (BCG) in Abell~85, Holm 15A,
displays the largest core so far known. Its cusp radius, kpc (), is more than 18 times
larger than the mean for BCGs, and kpc larger than A2261-BCG, hitherto
the largest-cored BCG (Postman, Lauer, Donahue, et al. 2012) Holm 15A hosts the
luminous amorphous radio source 0039-095B and has the optical signature of a
LINER. Scaling laws indicate that this core could host a supermassive black
hole (SMBH) of mass . We
suggest that cores this large represent a relatively short phase in the
evolution of BCGs, whereas the masses of their associated SBMH might be set by
initial conditions.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figure, 2 tables, accepted for publication in ApJ Letters
on October 6th, 2014, replacement of previous manuscript submitted on May
30th, 2014 to astro-p
Chandra Multiwavelength Project: Normal Galaxies at Intermediate Redshift
(abridged) We have investigated 136 Chandra extragalactic sources without
broad optical emission lines, including 93 galaxies with narrow emission lines
(NELG) and 43 with only absorption lines (ALG). Based on fx/fo, Lx, X-ray
spectral hardness and optical emission line diagnostics, we have conservatively
classified 36 normal galaxies (20 spirals and 16 ellipticals) and 71 AGNs. We
found no statistically significant evolution in Lx/LB, within the limited z
range. We have built log(N)-log(S), after correcting for completeness based on
a series of simulations. The best-fit slope is -1.5 for both S and B energy
bands, which is considerably steeper than that of the AGN-dominated cosmic
background sources, but slightly flatter than the previous estimate, indicating
normal galaxies will not exceed the AGN population until fx ~ 2 x 10-18 erg s-1
cm-2 (a factor of ~5 lower than the previous estimate). A group of NELGs appear
to be heavily obscured in X-rays, i.e., a typical type 2 AGN. After correcting
for intrinsic absorption, their X-ray luminosities could be Lx > 10^44 erg s-1,
making them type 2 quasar candidates. While most X-ray luminous ALGs (XBONG -
X-ray bright, optically normal galaxy candidates) do not appear to be
significantly absorbed, we found two heavily obscured objects, which could be
as luminous as an unobscured broad-line quasar. Among 43 ALGs, we found two E+A
galaxy candidates with strong Balmer absorption lines, but no [OII] line. The
X-ray spectra of both galaxies are soft and one of them has a nearby close
companion galaxy, supporting the merger/interaction scenario rather than the
dusty starburst hypothesis.Comment: 31 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ (20 June 2006,
v644), replaced with minor correction
The Luminosity Function of X-ray Selected Active Galactic Nuclei: Evolution of Supermassive Black Holes at High Redshift
We present a measure of the hard (2-8 keV) X-ray luminosity function (XLF) of
Active Galactic Nuclei up to z~5. At high redshifts, the wide area coverage of
the Chandra Multiwavength Project is crucial to detect rare and luminous (Lx >
10^44 erg s^-1) AGN. The inclusion of samples from deeper published surveys,
such as the Chandra Deep Fields, allows us to span the lower Lx range of the
XLF. Our sample is selected from both the hard (z 6.3x10^-16
erg cm^-2 s^-1) and soft (z > 3; f(0.5-2.0 keV) > 1.0x10^-16 erg cm^-2 s^-1)
energy band detections. Within our optical magnitude limits (r',i' < 24), we
achieve an adequate level of completeness (>50%) regarding X-ray source
identification (i.e., redshift). We find that the luminosity function is
similar to that found in previous X-ray surveys up to z~3 with an evolution
dependent upon both luminosity and redshift. At z > 3, there is a significant
decline in the numbers of AGN with an evolution rate similar to that found by
studies of optically-selected QSOs. Based on our XLF, we assess the resolved
fraction of the Cosmic X-ray Background, the cumulative mass density of
Supermassive Black Holes (SMBHs), and the comparison of the mean accretion rate
onto SMBHs and the star formation history of galaxies as a function of
redshift. A coevolution scenario up to z~2 is plausible though at higher
redshifts the accretion rate onto SMBHs drops more rapidly. Finally, we
highlight the need for better statistics of high redshift AGN at z > 3, which
is achievable with the upcoming Chandra surveys.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ; 25 pages, 18 figure
Hard X-ray emitting Active Galactic Nuclei selected by the Chandra Multi-wavelength Project
We present X-ray and optical analysis of 188 AGN identified from 497 hard
X-ray (f (2.0-8.0 keV) > 2.7x10^-15 erg cm^-2 s^-1) sources in 20 Chandra
fields (1.5 deg^2) forming part of the Chandra Multi-wavelength Project. These
medium depth X-ray observations enable us to detect a representative subset of
those sources responsible for the bulk of the 2-8 keV Cosmic X-ray Background.
Brighter than our optical spectroscopic limit, we achieve a reasonable degree
of completeness (77% of X-ray sources with counter-parts r'< 22.5 have been
classified): broad emission line AGN (62%), narrow emission line galaxies
(24%), absorption line galaxies (7%), stars (5%) or clusters (2%). We find that
most X-ray unabsorbed AGN (NH<10^22 cm^-2) have optical properties
characterized by broad emission lines and blue colors, similiar to
optically-selected quasars from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey but with a slighly
broader color distribution. However, we also find a significant population of
redder (g'-i'>1.0) AGN with broad optical emission lines. Most of the X-ray
absorbed AGN (10^22<NH<10^24 cm^-2) are associated with narrow emission line
galaxies, with red optical colors characteristically dominated by luminous,
early type galaxy hosts rather than from dust reddening of an AGN. We also find
a number of atypical AGN; for instance, several luminous AGN show both strong
X-ray absorption (NH>10^22 cm^-2) and broad emission lines. Overall, we find
that 81% of X-ray selected AGN can be easily interpreted in the context of
current AGN unification models. Most of the deviations seem to be due to an
optical contribution from the host galaxies of the low luminosity AGN.Comment: 26 pages; 13 figures (7 color); accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
The ChaMP Extended Stellar Survey (ChESS): Photometric and Spectroscopic Properties of Serendipitously Detected Stellar X-Ray Sources
We present 348 X-ray-emitting stars identified from correlating the Extended Chandra Multiwavelength Project (ChaMP), a wide-area serendipitous survey based on archival X-ray images, with the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). We use morphological star/galaxy separation, matching to an SDSS quasar catalog, an optical color-magnitude cut, and X-ray data-quality tests to create our catalog, the ChaMP Extended Stellar Survey (ChESS), from a sample of 2121 matched ChaMP/SDSS sources. Our cuts retain 92% of the spectroscopically confirmed stars in the original sample while excluding 99.6% of the 684 spectroscopically confirmed extragalactic sources. Fewer than 3% of the sources in our final catalog are previously identified stellar X-ray emitters. For 42 catalog members, spectroscopic classifications are available in the literature. We present new spectral classifications and Hα measurements for an additional 79 stars. The catalog is dominated by main-sequence stars; we estimate the fraction of giants in ChESS is ~10%. We identify seven giant stars (including a possible Cepheid and an RR Lyrae star) as ChaMP sources, as well as three cataclysmic variables. We derive distances from ~10 to 2000 pc for the stars in our catalog using photometric parallax relations appropriate for dwarfs on the main sequence and calculate their X-ray and bolometric luminosities. These stars lie in a unique space in the L_X-distance plane, filling the gap between the nearby stars identified as counterparts to sources in the ROSAT All Sky Survey and the more distant stars detected in deep Chandra and XMM-Newton surveys. For 36 newly identified X-ray-emitting M stars we calculate LHα/Lbol. The quantities LHα/Lbol and L_X/L_bol are linearly related below L_X/L_bol ~ 3 × 10⁻⁴, while L_Hα/L_bol appears to turn over at larger L_X/L_bol values. Stars with reliable SDSS photometry have an ~0.1 mag blue excess in u − g, likely due to increased chromospheric continuum emission. Photometric metallicity estimates suggest that the sample is evenly split between the young and old disk populations of the Galaxy; the lowest activity sources belong to the old disk population, a clear signature of the decay of magnetic activity with age. Future papers will present analyses of source variability and comparisons of this catalog to models of stellar activity in the Galactic disk
The Red-Sequence Luminosity Function in Galaxy Clusters since z~1
We use a statistical sample of ~500 rich clusters taken from 72 square
degrees of the Red-Sequence Cluster Survey (RCS-1) to study the evolution of
~30,000 red-sequence galaxies in clusters over the redshift range 0.35<z<0.95.
We construct red-sequence luminosity functions (RSLFs) for a well-defined,
homogeneously selected, richness limited sample. The RSLF at higher redshifts
shows a deficit of faint red galaxies (to M_V=> -19.7) with their numbers
increasing towards the present epoch. This is consistent with the `down-sizing`
picture in which star-formation ended at earlier times for the most massive
(luminous) galaxies and more recently for less massive (fainter) galaxies. We
observe a richness dependence to the down-sizing effect in the sense that, at a
given redshift, the drop-off of faint red galaxies is greater for poorer (less
massive) clusters, suggesting that star-formation ended earlier for galaxies in
more massive clusters. The decrease in faint red-sequence galaxies is
accompanied by an increase in faint blue galaxies, implying that the process
responsible for this evolution of faint galaxies is the termination of
star-formation, possibly with little or no need for merging. At the bright end,
we also see an increase in the number of blue galaxies with increasing
redshift, suggesting that termination of star-formation in higher mass galaxies
may also be an important formation mechanism for higher mass ellipticals. By
comparing with a low-redshift Abell Cluster sample, we find that the
down-sizing trend seen within RCS-1 has continued to the local universe.Comment: ApJ accepted. 11 pages, 5 figure
A Multiband Study of the Galaxy Populations of the First Four Sunyaev--Zeldovich Effect selected Galaxy Clusters
We present first results of an examination of the optical properties of the
galaxy populations in SZE selected galaxy clusters. Using clusters selected by
the South Pole Telescope survey and deep multiband optical data from the Blanco
Cosmology Survey, we measure the radial profile, the luminosity function, the
blue fraction and the halo occupation number of the galaxy populations of these
four clusters with redshifts ranging from 0.3 to 1. Our goal is to understand
whether there are differences among the galaxy populations of these SZE
selected clusters and previously studied clusters selected in the optical and
the X-ray. The radial distributions of galaxies in the four systems are
consistent with NFW profiles with a galaxy concentration of 3 to 6. We show
that the characteristic luminosities in bands are consistent with
passively evolving populations emerging from a single burst at redshift .
The faint end power law slope of the luminosity function is found to be on
average in griz. Halo occupation numbers (to ) for
these systems appear to be consistent with those based on X-ray selected
clusters. The blue fraction estimated to , for the three lower
redshift systems, suggests an increase with redshift, although with the current
sample the uncertainties are still large. Overall, this pilot study of the
first four clusters provides no evidence that the galaxy populations in these
systems differ significantly from those in previously studied cluster
populations selected in the X-ray or the optical.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figures and 3 tables. Accepted for publication in Ap
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