773 research outputs found
Toward Precision Measurement of Central Black Hole Masses
We review briefly direct and indirect methods of measuring the masses of
black holes in galactic nuclei, and then focus attention on supermassive black
holes in active nuclei, with special attention to results from reverberation
mapping and their limitations. We find that the intrinsic scatter in the
relationship between the AGN luminosity and the broad-line region size is very
small, ~0.11 dex, comparable to the uncertainties in the better reverberation
measurements. We also find that the relationship between reverberation-based
black hole masses and host-galaxy bulge luminosities also seems to have
surprisingly little intrinsic scatter, ~0.17 dex. We note, however, that there
are still potential systematics that could affect the overall mass calibration
at the level of a factor of a few.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures. To be published in the Proceedings of IAU
Symposium 267 "Co-Evolution of Central Black Holes and Galaxies
Selection of Forage and Avoidance of Predation Risk by Partially Migratory Mule Deer
Migration by ungulates has traditionally been thought of as a strategy that increases access to forage quality or reduces exposure to risk of predation, but the benefits of migration may be waning globally. In partially migratory populations, the persistence of both migrant and resident strategies is an intriguing ecological phenomenon, because migrants and residents often face contrasting fitness consequences. Partial migration is common in mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus), a species that has experienced widespread declines across the western United States during recent decades. Mule deer seldom switch between migratory strategies throughout their lifetime, which may make them less resilient to environmental change than more behaviorally plastic ungulate species. To indicate the mechanisms maintaining partial migration, we investigated how predation risk, forage quality, and habitat selection in relation to these factors varied between migrant and resident mule deer. First, we developed resource selection functions (RSFs) for wolves and mountain lions to estimate predation risk. Then, we modeled forage quality throughout mule deer summer ranges. We then compared forage quality (kcal/m2) and predation risk in migrant and resident summer ranges of 3 partially migratory populations across Western Montana. We found no substantial differences in forage quality between migrant and resident summer ranges, and predation risk did not differ predictably between the 2 groups. We used RSFs to assess how home range (2nd order) and within-home range (3rd order) selection varied between migrants and residents. At the 2nd order, neither migrants or residents selected forage or avoided wolf predation risk, but both groups avoided mountain lion predation risk. At the 3rd order, both migrants and residents selected for forage and avoided wolf and mountain lion predation risk. Given their exposure to similar forage and risk conditions between groups, and similar habitat selection patterns, our results suggest that the benefits of a migrant strategy did not outweigh those of a resident strategy during our study. Within mule deer populations, partial migration may be maintained due to changes in the relative benefits of migration over time. Mule deer behavior was consistent across different ecosystem types and migratory strategies, suggesting a general mechanism for summer habitat selection may exist for mule deer in forested environments of the Northern Rockies
Evidence for Supermassive Black Holes in Active Galactic Nuclei from Emission-Line Reverberation
Emission-line variability data for Seyfert 1 galaxies provide strong evidence
for the existence of supermassive black holes in the nuclei of these galaxies,
and that the line-emitting gas is moving in the gravitational potential of that
black hole. The time-delayed response of the emission lines to continuum
variations is used to infer the size of the line-emitting region, which is then
combined with measurements of the Doppler widths of the variable line
components to estimate a virial mass. In the case of the best-studied galaxy,
NGC 5548, various emission lines spanning an order of magnitude in distance
from the central source show the expected velocity proportional to inverse
square root of the distance correlation between distance and line width, and
are thus consistent with a single value for the mass. Two other Seyfert
galaxies, NGC 7469 and 3C 390.3, show a similar relationship. We compute the
ratio of luminosity to mass for these three objects and the narrow-line Seyfert
1 galaxy NGC 4051 and find that that the gravitational force on the
line-emitting gas is much stronger than radiation pressure. These results
strongly support the paradigm of gravitationally bound broad emission-line
region clouds.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, Accepted for publication in Astrophysical
Journal Letter
Long term variability of the Broad Emission Line profiles in AGN
Results of a long-term monitoring ( years) of the broad line and
continuum fluxes of three Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN), 3C 390.3, NGC 4151, and
NGC 5548, are presented. We analyze the H and H profile
variations during the monitoring period and study different details (as bumps,
absorption bands) which can indicate structural changes in the Broad Line
Region (BLR). The BLR dimensions are estimated using the time lags between the
continuum and the broad lines flux variations. We find that in the case of 3C
390.3 and NGC 5548 a disk geometry can explain both the broad line profiles and
their flux variations, while the BLR of NGC 4151 seems more complex and is
probably composed of two or three kinematically different regions.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, New Astronomy Reviews (Proceeding of 7th
SCSLSA), in pres
On the size of the Fe II emitting region in the AGN Akn 120
We present a reverberation analysis of the strong, variable optical Fe II
emission bands in the spectrum of Akn 120, a low-redshift AGN which is one of
the best candidates for such a study. On time scales of several years the Fe II
line strengths follow the variations in the continuum strength. However, we are
unable to measure a clear reverberation lag time for these Fe II lines on any
time scale. This is due to the very broad and flat-topped nature of the Fe II
cross correlation functions, as compared to the H-beta response which is much
more sharply localized in time. Although there is some suggestion in the light
curve of a 300-day response time, our statistical analysis does not pick up
such a feature. We conclude that the optical Fe II emission does not come from
a photoionization-powered region similar in size to the H-beta emitting region,
but we cannot say for sure where it does come from. Our results are generally
consistent either with emission from a photoionized region several times larger
than the H-beta zone, or with emission from gas heated by some other means,
perhaps responding only indirectly to the continuum variations.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Ap
Size-Mass-luminosity relations in AGN and the role of the accretion disc
We address the question of the relations between the black hole's mass, the
accretion rate, the bolometric luminosity, the optical luminosity and the size
of the Broad Line Region (BLR) in Active Galactic Nuclei, using recent
observational data obtained from monitoring campaigns. We show that a standard
accretion disc cannot account for the observed optical luminosity, unless it
radiates at super-Eddington rates. This implies the existence of another,
dominant emission mechanism in the optical range, or a non standard disc (non
stationary, ADAF and/or strong outflows). Narrow Line Seyfert 1 galaxies
(NLS1s) are most extreme in this context: they have larger bolometric to
Eddington luminosity ratios than Broad Line Seyfert 1 (BLS1s), and most likely
a larger "non disc" component in the optical range. From realistic simulations
of self-gravitating -discs, we have systematically localized the
gravitationally unstable disc and shown that, given uncertainties on both the
model and observations, it coincides quite well with the size of the BLR. We
therefore suggest that the gravitationally unstable disc is the source which
releases BLR clouds in the medium. However the influence of the ionization
parameter is also required to explain the correlation found between the size of
the BLR and the luminosity. In this picture the size of the BLR in NLS1s
(relative to the black hole size) is larger (and the emission line width
smaller) than in BLS1s simply because their Eddington ratio is larger.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, accepted in A &
On reverberation and cross-correlation estimates of the size of the broad-line region in active galactic nuclei
It is known that the dependence of the emission-line luminosity of a typical
cloud in the active galactic nuclei broad-line regions (BLRs) upon the incident
flux of ionizing continuum can be nonlinear. We study how this nonlinearity can
be taken into account in estimating the size of the BLR by means of the
"reverberation" methods. We show that the BLR size estimates obtained by
cross-correlation of emission-line and continuum light curves can be much (up
to an order of magnitude) less than the values obtained by reverberation
modelling. This is demonstrated by means of numerical cross-correlation and
reverberation experiments with model continuum flares and emission-line
transfer functions and by means of practical reverberation modelling of the
observed optical spectral variability of NGC 4151. The time behaviour of NGC
4151 in the H_alpha and H_beta lines is modelled on the basis of the
observational data by Kaspi et al. (1996, ApJ, 470, 336) and the theoretical
BLR model by Shevchenko (1984, Sov. Astron. Lett., 10, 377; 1985, Sov. Astron.
Lett., 11, 35). The values of the BLR parameters are estimated that allow to
judge on the size and physical characteristics of the BLR. The small size of
the BLR, as determined by the cross-correlation method from the data of Kaspi
et al. (1996, ApJ, 470, 336), is shown to be an artifact of this method. So,
the hypothesis that the BLR size varies in time is not necessitated by the
observational data.Comment: 26 pages, including 11 figure
A Look at What Is (and Isn't) Known About Quasar Broad Line Regions and How Narrow-Line Seyfert 1 Galaxies Fit In
The evidence is reviewed that the Broad Line Region (BLR) probably has two
distinct components located at about the same distance from the central black
hole. One component, BLR II, is optically-thick, low-ionization emission at
least some of which arises from a disc and the other, BLR I, is probably
optically-thin emission from a more spherically symmetric halo or atmosphere.
The high Fe II/H-beta ratios seen in Narrow-Line Seyfert 1 galaxies (NLS1s) are
not due to strong Fe II emission, as is commonly thought, but to unusually weak
Balmer emission, probably caused by higher densities. NLS1s probably differ
from non-NLS1s because of the higher density of gas near the black hole. This
produces a higher accretion rate, a denser BLR, and a view of the central
regions that is more face-on.Comment: Contributed talk presented at the Joint MPE,AIP,ESO workshop on
NLS1s, Bad Honnef, Dec. 1999, to appear in New Astronomy Reviews; also
available at http://wave.xray.mpe.mpg.de/conferences/nls1-worksho
Are quasars accreting at super-Eddington rates?
In a previous paper, Collin & Hur\'e (2001), using a sample of Active
Galactic Nuclei (AGN) where the mass has been determined by reverberation
studies (Kaspi et al. 2000), have shown that if the optical luminosity is
emitted by a steady accretion disc, about half of the objects are accreting
close to or higher than the Eddington rate. We conclude here that this result
is unavoidable, unless the masses are strongly underestimated by reverberation
studies, which does not seem to be the case. There are three issues to the
problem: 1. Accretion proceeds at Eddington or super-Eddington rates through
thick discs. Several consequences follow: an anti-correlation between the line
widths of the lines and the Eddington ratios, and a decrease of the Eddington
ratio with an increasing black hole mass. Extrapolated to all quasars, these
results imply that the amount of mass locked in massive black holes should be
larger than presently thought. 2. The optical luminosity is not produced
directly by the gravitational release of energy, and super-Eddington rates are
not required. The optical luminosity has to be emitted by a dense and thick
medium located at large distances from the center (10 to
gravitational radii). It can be due to reprocessing of the X-ray photons from
the central source in a geometrically thin warped disc, or in dense "blobs"
forming a geometrically thick system, which can be a part of the accretion flow
or the basis of an outflow. 3. Accretion discs are completely "non standard".
Presently neither the predictions of models nor the observed spectral
distributions are sufficient to help choosing between these solutions.Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures, accepted in A&
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