1,970 research outputs found
The Distribution and Cosmic Density of Relativistic Iron Lines in Active Galactic Nuclei
X-ray observations of several active galactic nuclei show prominent iron
K-shell fluorescence lines that are sculpted due to special and general
relativistic effects. These observations are important because they probe the
space-time geometry close to distant black holes. However, the intrinsic
distribution of Fe line strengths in the cosmos has never been determined. This
uncertainty has contributed to the controversy surrounding the relativistic
interpretation of the emission feature. Now, by making use of the latest
multi-wavelength data, we show theoretical predictions of the cosmic density of
relativistic Fe lines as a function of their equivalent width and line flux. We
are able to show unequivocally that the most common relativistic iron lines in
the universe will be produced by neutral iron fluorescence in Seyfert galaxies
and have equivalent widths < 100 eV. Thus, the handful of very intense lines
that have been discovered are just the bright end of a distribution of line
strengths. In addition to validating the current observations, the predicted
distributions can be used for planning future surveys of relativistic Fe lines.
Finally, the predicted sky density of equivalent widths indicate that the X-ray
source in AGNs can not, on average, lie on the axis of the black hole.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, accepted by ApJ Letter
Mid-Infrared line diagnostics of Active Galaxies -- A spectroscopic AGN survey with ISO-SWS
We present medium resolution (R approx. 1500) ISO-SWS 2.4--45 micron spectra
of a sample of 29 galaxies with active nuclei. This data set is rich in fine
structure emission lines tracing the narrow line regions and (circum-)nuclear
star formation regions, and it provides a coherent spectroscopic reference for
future extragalactic studies in the mid-infrared. We use the data set to
briefly discuss the physical conditions in the narrow line regions (density,
temperature, excitation, line profiles) and to test for possible differences
between AGN sub-types. Our main focus is on new tools for determining the
propertibes of dusty galaxies and on the AGN-starburst connection. We present
mid-IR line ratio diagrams which can be used to identify composite (starburst +
AGN) sources and to distinguish between emission excited by active nuclei and
emission from (circum-nuclear) star forming regions. For instance, line ratios
of high to low excitation lines like [O IV]25.9um/[Ne II]12.8um, that have been
used to probe for AGNs in dusty objects, can be examined in more detail and
with better statistics now. In addition, we present two-dimensional diagnostic
diagrams that are fully analogous to classical optical diagnostic diagrams, but
better suited for objects with high extinction. Finally, we discuss
correlations of mid-infrared line fluxes to the mid- and far-infrared
continuum. We compare these relations to similar relations in starburst
galaxies in order to examine the contribution of AGNs to the bolometric
luminosities of their host galaxies. The spectra are available in electronic
form from the authors.Comment: 24 pages, 23 figures, 5 tables. Accepted for A&
A view of the narrow-line region in the infrared: active galactic nuclei with resolved fine-structure lines in the Spitzer archive
We queried the Spitzer archive for high-resolution observations with the
Infrared Spectrograph of optically selected active galactic nuclei (AGN) for
the purpose of identifying sources with resolved fine-structure lines that
would enable studies of the narrow-line region (NLR) at mid-infrared
wavelengths. By combining 298 Spitzer spectra with 6 Infrared Space Observatory
spectra, we present kinematic information of the NLR for 81 z<=0.3 AGN. We used
the [NeV], [OIV], [NeIII], and [SIV] lines, whose fluxes correlate well with
each other, to probe gas photoionized by the AGN. We found that the widths of
the lines are, on average, increasing with the ionization potential of the
species that emit them. No correlation of the line width with the critical
density of the corresponding transition was found. The velocity dispersion of
the gas, sigma, is systematically higher than that of the stars, sigma_*, in
the AGN host galaxy, and it scales with the mass of the central black hole,
M_BH. Further correlations between the line widths and luminosities L, and
between L and M_BH, are suggestive of a three dimensional plane connecting
log(M_BH) to a linear combination of log(sigma) and log(L). Such a plane can be
understood within the context of gas motions that are driven by AGN feedback
mechanisms, or virialized gas motions with a power-law dependence of the NLR
radius on the AGN luminosity. The M_BH estimates obtained for 35 type 2 AGN
from this plane are consistent with those obtained from the M_BH-sigma_*
relation.Comment: ApJ, revised to match the print versio
Detailed Analysis of Balmer Lines in a Sloan Digital Sky Survey Sample of 90 Broad Line Active Galactic Nuclei
In order to contribute to the general effort aiming at the improvement of our
knowledge about the physical conditions within the Broad Line Region (BLR) of
Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN), here we present the results achieved by our
analysis of the spectral properties of a sample of 90 broad line emitting
sources, collected at the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) database. By focusing
our attention mainly onto the Balmer series of hydrogen emission lines, which
is the dominant feature in the optical wavelength range of many BLR spectra, we
extracted several flux and profile measurements, which we related to other
source properties, such as optical continuum luminosities, inferred black hole
masses, and accretion rates. Using the Boltzmann Plot method to investigate the
Balmer line flux ratios as a function of the line profiles, we found that
broader line emitting AGN typically have larger H_alpha / H_beta and smaller
H_gamma / H_beta and H_delta / H_beta line ratios. With the help of some recent
investigations, we model the structure of the BLR and we study the influence of
the accretion process on the properties of the BLR plasma.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures, fixes the wrong names of 4 objects; published
on Ap
XMM-Newton Spectroscopy of the Starburst Dominated Ultra Luminous Infrared Galaxy NGC 6240
We present new XMM-Newton observation of the Ultra Luminous Infrared Galaxy
(ULIRG) NGC 6240. We analyze the reflecting grating spectrometer (RGS) data,
and data from the other instruments, and find a starburst dominated 0.5-3 keV
spectrum with global properties resembling those observed in M82 but with a
much higher luminosity. We show that the starburst region can be divided into
an outer zone, beyond a radius of about 2.1 kpc, with a gas temperature of
about 10^7 K and a central region with temperatures in the range (2-6) x 10^7
K. The gas in the outer region emits most of the observed Oviii Lyman-alpha
line and the gas in the inner region the emission lines of higher ionization
ions, including a strong Fexxv line. We also identify a small inner part, very
close to the active nuclei, with typical Seyfert 2 properties including a large
amount of photoionized gas producing a strong Fe K-alpha 6.4 keV line. The
combined abundance, temperature and emission measure analysis indicates super
solar Ne/O, Mg/O, Si/O, S/O and possibly also Fe/O. The analysis suggests
densities in the range of (0.07-0.28) x epsilon^(-1/2) cm^(-3) and a total
thermal gas mass of about 4 x 10^8 x epsilon^(1/2) solar masses, where epsilon
is the volume filling factor. We used a simple model to argue that a massive
starburst with an age of about 2 x 10^7 years can explain most of the observed
properties of the source. NGC 6240 is perhaps the clearest case of an X-ray
bright luminous AGN, in a merger, whose soft X-ray spectrum is dominated by a
powerful starburst.Comment: 10 pages, 6 diagrams, accepted by ApJ, added a few minor change
The Primordial Helium Abundance: Towards Understanding and Removing the Cosmic Scatter in the dY/dZ Relation
We present results from photoionization models of low-metallicity HII
regions. These nebulae form the basis for measuring the primordial helium
abundance. Our models show that the helium ionization correction factor (ICF)
can be non-negligible for nebulae excited by stars with effective temperatures
larger than 40,000 K. Furthermore, we find that when the effective temperature
rises to above 45,000 K, the ICF can be significantly negative. This result is
independent of the choice of stellar atmosphere. However, if an HII region has
an [O III] 5007/[O I] 6300 ratio greater than 300, then our models show that,
regardless of its metallicity, it will have a negligibly small ICF. A similar,
but metallicity dependent, result was found using the [O III] 5007/H
ratio. These two results can be used as selection criteria to remove nebulae
with potentially non-negligible ICFs. Using our metallicity independent
criterion on the data of Izotov & Thuan (1998) results in a 20% reduction of
the rms scatter about the best fit line. A fit to the selected data
results in a slight increase of the value of the primordial helium abundance.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, accepted by the Ap
Spitzer Quasar and ULIRG evolution study (QUEST): I. The origin of the far infrared continuum of QSOs
This paper addresses the origin of the far-infrared (FIR) continuum of QSOs,
based on the Quasar and ULIRG Evolution Study (QUEST) of nearby QSOs and ULIRGs
using observations with the Spitzer Space Telescope. For 27 Palomar-Green QSOs
at z <~ 0.3, we derive luminosities of diagnostic lines ([NeII]12.8um,
[NeV]14.3um, [OIV]25.9um) and emission features (PAH7.7um emission which is
related to star formation), as well as continuum luminosities over a range of
mid- to far-infrared wavelengths between 6 and 60um. We detect star-formation
related PAH emission in 11/26 QSOs and fine-structure line emission in all of
them, often in multiple lines. The detection of PAHs in the average spectrum of
sources which lack individual PAH detections provides further evidence for the
widespread presence of PAHs in QSOs. Similar PAH/FIR and [NeII]/FIR ratios are
found in QSOs and in starburst-dominated ULIRGs and lower luminosity
starbursts. We conclude that the typical QSO in our sample has at least 30% but
likely most of the far-infrared luminosity (~ 10^(10...12)Lsun) arising from
star formation, with a tendency for larger star formation contribution at the
largest FIR luminosities. In the QSO sample, we find correlations between most
of the quantities studied including combinations of AGN tracers and starburst
tracers. The common scaling of AGN and starburst luminosities (and fluxes) is
evidence for a starburst-AGN connection in luminous AGN. Strong correlations of
far-infrared continuum and starburst related quantities (PAH, low excitation
[NeII]) offer additional support for the starburst origin of far-infrared
emission.Comment: 39 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
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