6,572 research outputs found

    Low-Ionization Emission Regions in Quasars: Gas Properties Probed with Broad O I and Ca II Lines

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    We have compiled the emission-line fluxes of O I 8446, O I 11287, and the near-IR Ca II triplet (8579) observed in 11 quasars. These lines are considered to emerge from the same gas as do the Fe II lines in the low-ionized portion of the broad emission line region (BELR). The compiled quasars are distributed over wide ranges of redshift (0.06 < z < 1.08) and of luminosity (-29.8 < M_B < -22.1), thus representing a useful sample to investigate the line-emitting gas properties in various quasar environments. The measured line strengths and velocities, as functions of the quasar properties, are analyzed using photoionization model calculations. We found that the flux ratio between Ca II and O I 8446 is hardly dependent on the redshift or luminosity, indicating similar gas density in the emission region from quasar to quasar. On the other hand, a scatter of the O I 11287/8446 ratios appears to imply the diversity of the ionization parameter. These facts invoke a picture of the line-emitting gases in quasars that have similar densities and are located at regions exposed to various ionizing radiation fluxes. The observed O I line widths are found to be remarkably similar over more than 3 orders of magnitude in luminosity, which indicates a kinematically determined location of the emission region and is in clear contrast to the well-studied case of H I lines. We also argue about the dust presence in the emission region since the region is suggested to be located near the dust sublimation point at the outer edge of the BELR.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ; minor rewordings mad

    OAO/ISLE Near-IR Spectroscopy of IRAS Galaxies

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    We present the results of the near-infrared (IR) spectroscopy of nine IRAS galaxies (NGC 1266, NGC 1320, NGC 2633, NGC 2903, NGC 3034, Mrk 33, NGC 7331, NGC 7625, NGC 7714) with the ISLE imager and spectrograph mounted on the Okayama Astrophysical Observatory 1.88 m telescope. [Fe II] 1.257 um and Pa beta emission lines were observed for the whole sample while H2 2.121 um and Br gamma lines were additionally obtained for two sources, whose flux ratios are used as a diagnostic tool of dominant energy sources of the galaxies. We find that the nucleus of NGC 1266 is most likely a low ionization nuclear emission-line region (LINER), while NGC 2633 and NGC 2903 possibly harbor active galactic nuclei (AGNs). No AGN or LINER signal is found for other objects. In addition, we find the spectral features which is indicative of some unusual phenomena occurring in the galaxies, such as the large [Fe II] line widths compared to the local escape velocity in NGC 1266. The present work shows the potential ability of the ISLE to shed new light on the nature of infrared galaxies, either through a statistical survey of galaxies or an exploration of spectral features found in individual objects.Comment: Accepted for publication in PAS

    An Indictment of Bright Line Tests for Honest Services Mail Fraud

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    Sparse matrix-matrix multiplication (SpGEMM) is a computational primitive that is widely used in areas ranging from traditional numerical applications to recent big data analysis and machine learning. Although many SpGEMM algorithms have been proposed, hardware specific optimizations for multi- and many-core processors are lacking and a detailed analysis of their performance under various use cases and matrices is not available. We firstly identify and mitigate multiple bottlenecks with memory management and thread scheduling on Intel Xeon Phi (Knights Landing or KNL). Specifically targeting multi- and many-core processors, we develop a hash-table-based algorithm and optimize a heap-based shared-memory SpGEMM algorithm. We examine their performance together with other publicly available codes. Different from the literature, our evaluation also includes use cases that are representative of real graph algorithms, such as multi-source breadth-first search or triangle counting. Our hash-table and heap-based algorithms are showing significant speedups from libraries in the majority of the cases while different algorithms dominate the other scenarios with different matrix size, sparsity, compression factor and operation type. We wrap up in-depth evaluation results and make a recipe to give the best SpGEMM algorithm for target scenario. A critical finding is that hash-table-based SpGEMM gets a significant performance boost if the nonzeros are not required to be sorted within each row of the output matrix

    Co-evolution of Galaxies and Central Black Holes: Observational Evidence on the Trigger of AGN Feedback

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    A comprehensive analysis of extended emission line region (EELR) around quasars is presented. New Subaru/Suprime-Cam observation is combined with literature search, resulting in a compilation of 81 EELR measurements for type-1 and type-2 quasars with associated active galactic nucleus (AGN) and host galaxy properties. It is found that EELR phenomenon shows clear correlation with Eddington ratio, which links EELR to the constituents of the principal component 1 (PC 1), or eigenvector 1, of the AGN emission correlations. We also find that EELR is preferentially associated with gas-rich, massive blue galaxies. It supports the idea that the primary determinant of EELR creation is the gas availability and that the gas may be brought in by galaxy merger triggering the current star formation as well as AGN activity, and also gives an explanation for the fact that most luminous EELR is found around radio-loud sources with low Eddington ratio. By combining all the observations, it is suggested that EELR quasars occupy the massive blue corner of the green valley, the AGN realm, on the galaxy color - stellar mass diagram. Once a galaxy is pushed to this corner, activated AGN would create EELR by the energy injection into the interstellar gas and eventually blow it away, leading to star-formation quenching. The results presented here provide a piece of evidence for the presence of such AGN feedback process, which may be playing a leading role in the co-evolution of galaxies and central super-massive black holes.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
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