208 research outputs found
The Close Environment of Seyfert Galaxies and Its Implication for Unification Models
This paper presents a statistical analysis of the circumgalactic environment
of nearby Seyfert galaxies based on a computer-aided search of companion
galaxies on the Digitized Sky Survey (DSS). An intrinsic difference between the
environment of Seyfert 1 and Seyfert 2 galaxies, suggested by previous work, is
confirmed as statistically significant. For Seyfert 2 galaxies we find a
significant excess of large companions (diameter of companion >= 10 Kpc) within
a search radius <= 100 Kpc of projected linear distance, as well as within a
search radius equal to three times the diameter \ds of each Seyfert galaxy. For
Seyfert 1 galaxies there is no clear evidence of any excess of companion
galaxies neither within 100 Kpc, nor within 3\ds. For all samples the number of
companions suggests a markedly non-Poissonian distribution for galaxies on
scales <= 100 Kpc. This difference in environment is not compatible with the
simplest formulation of the Unification Model for Seyferts: both types 1 and 2
should be intrinsicaly alike, the only difference being due to orientation of
an obscuring torus. We propose an alternative formulation.Comment: 1 figure, accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal Letter
The Circum-Galactic Environment of Bright IRAS Galaxies
This paper studies systematically, for the first time, the circumgalactic
environment of bright IRAS galaxies as defined by Soifer et al. (1989). While
the role of gravitational interaction for luminous and ultraluminous IRAS
galaxies has been well established by various studies, the situation is by far
more obscure in the IR luminosity range of the bright IRAS sample, 10^{10}Lsol
< Lfir < 10^{11} Lsol. To easily identify nearby companion galaxies, the bright
IRAS sample was restricted to 87 objects with redshift range 0.008 < z < 0.018
and galactic latitude > 30^{o}. A control sample, selected from the Center for
Astrophysics redshift survey catalogue, includes 90 objects matching the Bright
IRAS sample for distribution of isophotal diameter, redshift, and morphological
type. From a search of nearby companion galaxies within 250 Kpc on the
second-generation Digitized Sky Survey (DSS-II), we found that the
circumgalactic environment of the Bright IRAS galaxies contains more large
companions than the galaxies in the optically selected control sample, and is
similar to that of Seyfert 2 galaxies. We found a weak correlation over a wide
range of far IR luminosity (10^9 Lsol < Lfir < 10^{12.5}Lsol) between projected
separation and Lfir, which confirms a very close relationship between star
formation rate of a galaxy and the strength of gravitational perturbations. We
also find that the far IR colors depend on whether a source is isolated or
interacting. Finally, we discuss the intrinsic difference and evolution
expectations for the bright IRAS galaxies and the control sample, as well as
the relationship between starbursting and active galaxies.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figs, 2 tables. Accepted for publication in Ap
Fifty Years of Quasars: Physical Insights and Potential for Cosmology
Last year (2013) was more or less the 50th anniversary of the discovery of
quasars. It is an interesting time to review what we know (and don't know)
about them both empirically and theoretically. These compact sources involving
line emitting plasma show extraordinary luminosities extending to one thousand
times that of our Milky Way in emitting volumes of a few solar system diameters
(bolometric luminosity log L 44-48 [erg s]: D=1-3 light
months - gravitational radii). The advent of 8-10 meter
class telescopes enables us to study them spectroscopically in ever greater
detail.
In 2000 we introduced a 4D Eigenvector 1 parameters space involving optical,
UV and X-Ray measures designed to serve as a 4D equivalent of the 2D
Hertzsprung-Russell diagram so important for depicting the diversity of stellar
types and evolutionary states. This diagram has revealed a principal sequence
of quasars distinguished by Eddington ratio (proportional to the accretion rate
per unit mass). Thus while stellar differences are primarily driven by the mass
of a star, quasar differences are apparently driven by the ratio of
luminosity-to-mass.
Out of this work has emerged the concept of two quasars populations A and B
separated at Eddington ratio around 0.2 which maximizes quasar multispectral
differences. The mysterious 8% of quasars that are radio-loud belong to
population B which are the lowest accretors with the largest black hole masses.
Finally we consider the most extreme population A quasars which are the highest
accretors and in some cases are among the youngest quasars. We describe how
these sources might be exploited as standard candles for cosmology.Comment: Accepted for publication in Journal of Physics Conference Series (10
pages, 4 figures). Invited Lecture at International Symposium on the Physics
of Ionized Gas (SPIG 2014), Belgrade 26-29 August 201
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