7,752 research outputs found
Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Effects from Quasars in Galaxies and Groups
The energy fed by active galactic nuclei to the surrounding diffuse baryons
changes their amount, temperature, and distribution; so in groups and in member
galaxies it affects the X-ray luminosity and also the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich
effect. Here we compute how the latter is enhanced by the transient blastwave
driven by an active quasar, and is depressed when the equilibrium is recovered
with a depleted density. We constrain such depressions and enhancements with
the masses of relic black holes in galaxies and the X-ray luminosities in
groups. We discuss how all these linked observables can tell the quasar
contribution to the thermal history of the baryons pervading galaxies and
groups.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, uses REVTeX4 and emulateapj.cls. Accepted by ApJ
X-raying the Star Formation History of the Universe
The current models of early star and galaxy formation are based upon the
hierarchical growth of dark matter halos, within which the baryons condense
into stars after cooling down from a hot diffuse phase. The latter is
replenished by infall of outer gas into the halo potential wells; this includes
a fraction previously expelled and preheated, due to momentum and energy fed
back by the SNe which follow the star formation. We identify such an implied
hot phase with the medium known to radiate powerful X-rays in clusters and in
groups of galaxies. We show that the amount of the hot component required by
the current star formation models is enough to be observable out to redshifts
in forthcoming deep surveys from {\it Chandra} and {\it XMM},
especially in case the star formation rate is high at such and earlier .
These X-ray emissions constitute a necessary counterpart, and will provide a
much wanted probe of the SF process itself (in particular, of the SN feedback),
to parallel and complement the currently debated data from optical and IR
observations of the young stars.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publicatin in ApJ
Testing X-ray Measurements of Galaxy Clusters with Cosmological Simulations
X-ray observations of galaxy clusters potentially provide powerful
cosmological probes if systematics due to our incomplete knowledge of the
intracluster medium (ICM) physics are understood and controlled. In this paper,
we present mock Chandra analyses of cosmological cluster simulations and assess
X-ray measurements of galaxy cluster properties using a model and procedure
essentially identical to that used in real data analysis. We show that
reconstruction of three-dimensional ICM density and temperature profiles is
excellent for relaxed clusters, but still reasonably accurate for unrelaxed
systems. The total ICM mass is measured quite accurately (<6%) in all clusters,
while the hydrostatic estimate of the gravitationally bound mass is biased low
by about 5%-20% through the virial region, primarily due to additional pressure
support provided by subsonic bulk motions in the ICM, ubiquitous in our
simulations even in relaxed systems. Gas fraction determinations are therefore
biased high; the bias increases toward cluster outskirts and depends
sensitively on its dynamical state, but we do not observe significant trends of
the bias with cluster mass or redshift. We also find that different average ICM
temperatures, such as the X-ray spectroscopic Tspec and gas-mass-weighted Tmg,
are related to each other by a constant factor with a relatively small
object-to-object scatter and no systematic trend with mass, redshift or the
dynamical state of clusters. We briefly discuss direct applications of our
results for different cluster-based cosmological tests.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Ap
Crystallization of fractional charges in a strongly interacting quasi-helical quantum dot
The ground-state electron density of a one-dimensional spin-orbit coupled
quantum dot with a Zeeman term and strong electron interaction is studied at
the fractional helical liquid points. We show that at fractional filling
factors (with a non-negative integer) the density
oscillates with peak. For a number of peaks larger than
the number of electrons suggests that a crystal of fractional
quasi-particles with charge (with the electron charge) occurs. The
reported effect is amenable of verification via transport measurements in
charged AFM-coupled dot
Dark Energy and the mass of galaxy clusters
Up to now, Dark Energy evidences are based on the dynamics of the universe on
very large scales, above 1 Gpc. Assuming it continues to behave like a
cosmological constant on much smaller scales, I discuss its effects
on the motion of non-relativistic test-particles in a weak gravitational field
and I propose a way to detect evidences of at the scale of
about 1 Mpc: the main ingredient is the measurement of galaxy cluster masses.Comment: 5 pages, no figures, references adde
3C 295, a cluster and its cooling flow at z=0.46
We present ROSAT HRI data of the distant and X-ray luminous (L_x(bol)=2.6^
{+0.4}_{-0.2} 10^{45}erg/sec) cluster of galaxies 3C 295. We fit both a
one-dimensional and a two-dimensional isothermal beta-model to the data, the
latter one taking into account the effects of the point spread function (PSF).
For the error analysis of the parameters of the two-dimensional model we
introduce a Monte-Carlo technique. Applying a substructure analysis, by
subtracting a cluster model from the data, we find no evidence for a merger,
but we see a decrement in emission South-East of the center of the cluster,
which might be due to absorption. We confirm previous results by Henry &
Henriksen(1986) that 3C 295 hosts a cooling flow. The equations for the simple
and idealized cooling flow analysis presented here are solely based on the
isothermal beta-model, which fits the data very well, including the center of
the cluster. We determine a cooling flow radius of 60-120kpc and mass accretion
rates of dot{M}=400-900 Msun/y, depending on the applied model and temperature
profile. We also investigate the effects of the ROSAT PSF on our estimate of
dot{M}, which tends to lead to a small overestimate of this quantity if not
taken into account. This increase of dot{M} (10-25%) can be explained by a
shallower gravitational potential inferred by the broader overall profile
caused by the PSF, which diminishes the efficiency of mass accretion. We also
determine the total mass of the cluster using the hydrostatic approach. At a
radius of 2.1 Mpc, we estimate the total mass of the cluster (M{tot}) to be
(9.2 +/- 2.7) 10^{14}Msun. For the gas to total mass ratio we get M{gas}/M{tot}
=0.17-0.31, in very good agreement with the results for other clusters of
galaxies, giving strong evidence for a low density universe.Comment: 26 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Images, structural properties and metal abundances of galaxy clusters observed with Chandra ACIS-I at 0.1<z<1.3
We have assembled a sample of 115 galaxy clusters at 0.1<z<1.3 with archived
Chandra ACIS-I observations. We present X-ray images of the clusters and make
available region files containing contours of the smoothed X-ray emission. The
structural properties of the clusters were investigated and we found a
significant absence of relaxed clusters (as determined by centroid shift
measurements) at z>0.5. The slope of the surface brightness profiles at large
radii were steeper on average by 15% than the slope obtained by fitting a
simple beta-model to the emission. This slope was also found to be correlated
with cluster temperature, with some indication that the correlation is weaker
for the clusters at z>0.5. We measured the mean metal abundance of the cluster
gas as a function of redshift and found significant evolution, with the
abundances dropping by 50% between z=0.1 and z~1. This evolution was still
present (although less significant) when the cluster cores were excluded from
the abundance measurements, indicating that the evolution is not solely due to
the disappearance of relaxed, cool core clusters (which are known to have
enhanced core metal abundances) from the population at z>0.5.Comment: 23 pages, 12 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJS. Updated to
match published version. Redshifts of two clusters (RXJ1701 and CL0848)
corrected and two observations of MACSJ0744.8 have been combined into one.
Conclusions unchanged. A version with images of all of the clusters is
available at http://hea-www.harvard.edu/~bmaughan/clusters.htm
X-ray and Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Effect Measurements of the Gas Mass Fraction in Galaxy Clusters
We present gas mass fractions of 38 massive galaxy clusters spanning
redshifts from 0.14 to 0.89, derived from Chandra X-ray data and OVRO/BIMA
interferometric Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Effect measurements. We use three models for
the gas distribution: (1) an isothermal beta-model fit jointly to the X-ray
data at radii beyond 100 kpc and to all of the SZE data,(2) a non-isothermal
double beta-model fit jointly to all of the X-ray and SZE data, and (3) an
isothermal beta-model fit only to the SZE spatial data. We show that the simple
isothermal model well characterizes the intracluster medium (ICM) outside of
the cluster core in clusters with a wide range of morphological properties. The
X-ray and SZE determinations of mean gas mass fractions for the 100 kpc-cut
isothermal beta-model are fgas(X-ray)=0.110 +0.003-0.003 +0.006-0.018 and
fgas(SZE)=0.116 +0.005-0.005 +0.009-0.026, where uncertainties are statistical
followed by systematic at 68% confidence. For the non-isothermal double
beta-model, fgas(X-ray)=0.119 +0.003-0.003 +0.007-0.014 and fgas(SZE)=0.121
+0.005-0.005 +0.009-0.016. For the SZE-only model, fgas(SZE)=0.120 +0.009-0.009
+0.009-0.027. Our results indicate that the ratio of the gas mass fraction
within r2500 to the cosmic baryon fraction is 0.68 +0.10-0.16 where the range
includes statistical and systematic uncertainties. By assuming that cluster gas
mass fractions are independent of redshift, we find that the results are in
agreement with standard LambdaCDM cosmology and are inconsistent with a flat
matter dominated universe.Comment: ApJ, submitted. 47 pages, 5 figures, 8 table
Massive Coronae of Galaxies
There is reason to suspect that about half of the baryons are in
pressure-supported plasma in the halos of normal galaxies, drawn in by gravity
along with about half of the dark matter. To be consistent with the
observations this baryonic component, the corona, would have to be hotter than
the kinetic temperature of the dark matter in the halo so as to produce
acceptable central electron densities. We ascribe this hotter plasma
temperature to the addition of entropy prior to and during assembly of the
system, in an analogy to cluster formation. The plasma cooling time would be
longer than the gravitational collapse time but, in the inner parts, shorter
than the Hubble time, making the corona thermally unstable to the formation of
a cloudy structure that may be in line with what is indicated by quasar
absorption line systems. The corona of an isolated spiral galaxy would be a
source of soft X-ray and recombination radiation, adding to the more commonly
discussed effects of stars and supernovae. In this picture the mass in the
corona is much larger than the mass in condensed baryons in a spiral galaxy.
The corona thus would be a substantial reservoir of diffuse baryons that are
settling and adding to the mass in interstellar matter and stars, so that star
formation in isolated spirals will continue well beyond the present epoch.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
- …
