138 research outputs found

    Spectroscopic characteristics of the cyanomethyl anion and its deuterated derivatives

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    It has long been suggested that CH2CN- might be a carrier of one of the many poorly characterized diffuse interstellar bands. In this paper, our aim is to study various forms of CH2CN in the interstellar medium. Aim of this paper is to predict spectroscopic characteristics of various forms of CH2CN and its deuterated derivatives. Moreover, we would like to model the interstellar chemistry for making predictions for the column densities of such species around dark cloud conditions. A detailed quantum chemical simulations to present the spectral properties of various forms of the CH2CN. MP2 theory along with the aug-CCPVTZ basis set is used to obtain different spectroscopic constants of CH2CN-, CHDCN- and CD2CN- in the gas phase which are essential to predict rotational spectra of these species. We performed quantum chemical calculation to find out energetically the most stable spin states for these species. We have computed IR and electronic absorption spectra for different forms of CH2CN. Moreover, we have also implemented a large gas-grain chemical network to predict the column densities of various forms of the cyanomethyl radical and its related species. In order to mimic physical conditions around a dense cloud region, the variation of the visual extinction parameters are considered with respect to the hydrogen number density of the simulated cloud. Our quantum chemical calculation reveals that the singlet spin state is the most stable form of cyanomethyl anion and its deuterated forms. For the confirmation of the detection of the cyanomethyl anion and its two deuterated forms, namely, CHDCN- and CD2CN-, we present the rotational spectral information of these species in the Appendix. Our chemical model predicts that the deuterated forms of cyanomethyl radicals (specially the anions) are also reasonably abundant around the dense region of the molecular cloud.Comment: 55 pages, 4 figures, accepted for the publication in A&

    Spectral Properties of M87 Using Two-Component Flow

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    We fit the observational data for M87 using two-component advective disk model. We show that the flat spectrum from the nucleus of M87 is due to synchrotron radiation produced by non-thermal electrons in the CENBOL. The non-thermal distribution is produced due to acceleration of electrons across the shock in a sub-Keplerian flow.Comment: 4 Pages, 1 Figures, Proceeding of the 2nd Kolkata Conference on "Observational Evidence for the Black Holes in the Universe", Published in AIP, 200

    Black hole mass measurements using ionized gas discs: systematic dust effects

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    Using detailed Monte Carlo radiative transfer simulations in realistic models for galactic nuclei, we investigate the influence of interstellar dust in ionized gas discs on the rotation curves and the resulting black hole mass measurements. We find that absorption and scattering by interstellar dust leaves the shape of the rotation curves basically unaltered, but slightly decreases the central slope of the rotation curves. As a result, the "observed" black hole masses are systematically underestimated by some 10 to 20% for realistic optical depths. We therefore argue that the systematic effect of dust attenuation should be taken into account when estimating SMBH masses using ionized gas kinematics.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, to appear in "Observational Evidence for Black Holes in the Universe", AIP Conference Proceeding

    Typical AGN at intermediate redshifts

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    We study the host galaxies and black holes of typical X-ray selected AGN at intermediate redshifts (z~0.5-1.4). The AGN are selected such that their spectral energy distributions are dominated by stellar emission, i.e., they show a prominent 1.6micron bump thus minimizing the AGN emission contamination. This AGN population comprises approximately 50% of the X-ray selected AGN at these redshifts. AGN reside in the most massive galaxies at the redshifts probed here, with characteristic stellar masses that are intermediate between those of local type 2 AGN and high redshift (z~2) AGN. The inferred black hole masses of typical AGN are similar to those of optically identified quasars at similar redshifts. Since the AGN in our sample are much less luminous than quasars, typical AGN have low Eddington ratios. This suggests that, at least at intermediate redshifts, the cosmic AGN 'downsizing' is due to both a decrease in the characteristic stellar mass of the host galaxies, and less efficient accretion. Finally there is no strong evidence in AGN host galaxies for either highly suppressed star formation, expected if AGN played a role in quenching star formation, or elevated star formation when compared to mass selected galaxies of similar stellar masses and redshifts.Comment: Conference proceedings of the meeting "Observational Evidence for Black Holes" held in Calcutta, Feb 2008. Paper will be published by AI

    Black Hole Accretion: From Quasars to Nano-Quasars

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    In this review we shall comment on a few recent findings which strengthen the view that the black hole accretion has substantial amount of sub-Keplerian component. The manifestation of this component is many fold. We discuss some of them. A general outline of the complex structure that emerges from the multitude of observations is presented. A detailed outline of what might be going on in outburst sources is also discussed. The relationship amount the spectral and timing properties can be best understood by this picture. We claim that the sub-Keplerian advective disk paradigm is a complete package. Since signatures of sub-Keplerian motion is already increasing in the literature, the whole package must be correct.Comment: 7 Pages, 2 Figures, Proceeding of the 2nd Kolkata Conference on "Observational Evidence for the Black Holes in the Universe", Published in AIP, 200

    Black hole masses and accretion states in ULXs

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    We summarize indirect empirical arguments used for estimating black hole (BH) masses in ultraluminous X-ray sources (ULXs). The interpretation of the X-ray data is still too model-dependent to provide tight constraints, but masses <~ 100 Msun seem the most likely. It is getting clearer that ULXs do not show the same evolutionary sequence between canonical spectral states as stellar-mass BHs, nor the same timescale for state transitions. Most ULX spectra are consistent either with a power-law-dominated state (apparently identical to the canonical low/hard state), or with a very high state (or slim-disk state). Despite often showing luminosity variability, there is little evidence of ULXs settling into a canonical high/soft state, dominated by a standard disk (disk-blackbody spectrum). It is possible that the mass accretion rate (but not necessarily the luminosity) is always higher than Eddington; but there may be additional physical differences between stellar-mass BHs and ULXs, which disfavour transitions to the standard-disk, radio-quiet state in the latter class. We speculate that the hard state in ULXs is associated with jet or magnetic processes rather than an ADAF, can persist up to accretion rates ~ Eddington, and can lead directly to the very high state.Comment: 8 pages; to appear in the proceedings of the conference "Observational Evidence of Black Holes", Kolkata, February 200
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