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The radio core of the Ultraluminous Infrared Galaxy F00183-7111: watching the birth of a quasar

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 Added by Ray Norris
 Publication date 2011
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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F00183-7111 is one of the most extreme Ultra-Luminous Infrared Galaxies known. Here we present a VLBI image which shows that F00183-7111 is powered by a combination of a radio-loud Active Galactic Nucleus surrounded by vigorous starburst activity. Although already radio-loud, the quasar jets are only 1.7 kpc long, boring through the dense gas and starburst activity that confine them. We appear to be witnessing this remarkable source in the brief transition period between merging starburst and radio-loud quasar-mode accretion.



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We present an X-ray study of the ultra-luminous infrared galaxy IRAS F00183-7111 (z=0.327), using data obtained from NuSTAR, Chandra X-ray Observatory, Suzaku and XMM-Newton. The Chandra imaging shows that a point-like X-ray source is located at the nucleus of the galaxy at energies above 2 keV. However, the point source resolves into diffuse emission at lower energies, extending to the east, where the extranuclear [O III] emission, presumably induced by a galactic-scale outflow, is present. The nuclear source is detected by NuSTAR up to the rest-frame 30 keV. The strong, high-ionization Fe K line, first seen by XMM-Newton, and subsequently by Suzaku and Chandra, is not detected in the NuSTAR data. The line flux appears to have been declining continuously between 2003 and 2016, while the continuum emission remained stable to within 30%. The X-ray continuum below 10 keV is characterised by a hard spectrum caused by cold absorption of nH ~1e23 cm-2, compatible to that of the silicate absorption at 9.7 micron, and a broad absorption feature around 8 keV which we attribute to a high-ionization Fe K absorption edge. The latter is best described by a blueshifted, high-ionization (log xi ~3) absorber. No extra hard component, which would arise from a Compton-thick source, is seen in the NuSTAR data. While a pure reflection scenario (with a totally hidden central source) is viable, direct emission from the central source of L(2-10 keV) = 2e44 erg/s, behind layers of cold and hot absorbing gas may be an alternative explanation. In this case, the relative X-ray quietness (Lx/L_AGN ~6e-3), the high-ionization Fe line, strong outflows inferred from various observations, and other similarities to the well-studied ULIRG/QSO Mrk 231 point that the central source in this ULIRG might be accreting close to the Eddington limit.
The extreme ULIRG F00183-7111 has recently been found to have a radio-loud AGN with jets in its centre, representing an extreme example of the class of radio-loud AGNs buried within dusty star-forming galaxies. This source appears to be a rare example of a ULIRG glimpsed in the (presumably) brief period as it changes from quasar mode to radio mode activity. Such transition stages probably account for many of the high-redshift radio-galaxies and extreme high-redshift ULIRGs, and so this object at the relatively low redshift of 0.328 offers a rare opportunity to study this class of objects in detail. We have also detected the CO signal from this galaxy with the ATCA, and here describe the implications of this detection for future ULIRG studies.
The galaxy NGC 4418 contains one of the most compact obscured nuclei within a luminous infrared galaxy (LIRG) in the nearby Universe. This nucleus contains a rich molecular gas environment and an unusually high ratio of infrared to radio luminosity (q-factor). The compact nucleus is powered by either a compact starburst or an active galactic nucleus (AGN). The aim of this study is to constrain the nature of the nuclear region (starburst or AGN) within NGC 4418 via very-high-resolution radio imaging. Archival data from radio observations using the EVN and MERLIN interferometers are imaged. Sizes and flux densities are obtained by fitting Gaussian intensity distributions to the image. The average spectral index of the compact radio emission is estimated from measurements at 1.4 GHz and 5.0 GHz. The nuclear structure of NGC 4418 visible with EVN and MERLIN consists of eight compact (<49 mas i.e. <8 pc) features spread within a region of 250 mas, i.e. 41 pc. We derive an inverted spectral index $alphage0.7$ ($S_ upropto u^{alpha}$) for the compact radio emission. Brightness temperatures $>10^{4.8}$ K indicate that these compact features cannot be HII-regions. The complex morphology and inverted spectrum of the eight detected compact features is evidence against the hypothesis that an AGN alone is powering the nucleus of NGC 4418. The compact features could be super star clusters (SSCs) with intense star formation, and their associated free-free absorption could then naturally explain both their inverted radio spectrum and the low radio to IR ratio of the nucleus. The required star formation area density is extreme, however, and close to the limit of what can be observed in a well-mixed thermal/non-thermal plasma produced by star-formation, and is also close to the limit of what can be physically sustained.
92 - William C. Keel 2009
I set the stage for discussion of the stellar populations in interacting galaxies by looking back over the slow development of our understanding of these systems. From early anecdotal collections, to systematic cataloging, and finally to increasingly sophisticated n-body calculations, we have seen how gravity in distributed systems can produce the stunning variety of structures we see. At the same time, measures across the spectrum have made it clear that galaxy interactions are linked to star formation, albeit with the physical mechanisms much less clear. Improved data sets, including HST imaging, deep IR data, and large samples with well-defined selection criteria, have started to reveal correlations with dynamical parameters pointing to detailed histories of starbirth during collisions. The merger hypothesis for elliptical galaxies has broadened into seeing interactions and mergers as important parts of the overall evolution of galaxies. The connection becomes more important as we look to higher redshift, where more frequent interactions can drive the evolution of galaxies in multiple ways. Links between the properties of central black holes and surrounding galaxies makes it important likewise to understand the connections between AGN and interactions, which has remained more ambiguous due to the strong role of sample selection. Finally, contemporary data reach deep enough to show that most galaxies have interacted in the observable past; we must consider these events to be a normal part of galaxy history.
60 - H.W.W. Spoon , L. Armus , J. Cami 2004
We report the detection of strong absorption and weak emission features in the 4--27 micron Spitzer-IRS spectrum of the distant ultraluminous infrared galaxy (ULIRG) IRAS F00183--7111 (z=0.327). The absorption features of CO2 and CO gas, water ice, hydrocarbons and silicates are indicative of a strongly obscured (A[9.6]>=5.4; A[V]>=90) and complex line of sight through both hot diffuse ISM and shielded cold molecular clouds towards the nuclear power source. From the profile of the 4.67 micron CO fundamental vibration mode we deduce that the absorbing gas is dense (n~10^6 cm^-3) and warm (720 K) and has a CO column density of ~10^19.5 cm^-2, equivalent to N[H]~10^23.5 cm^-2. The high temperature and density, as well as the small infered size (<0.03pc), locates this absorbing gas close to the power source of this region. Weak emission features of molecular hydrogen, PAHs and Ne+, likely associated with star formation, are detected against the 9.7 micron silicate feature, indicating an origin away from the absorbing region. Based on the 11.2 micron PAH flux, we estimate the star formation component to be responsible for up to 30% of the IR luminosity of the system. While our mid-infrared spectrum shows no tell-tale signs of AGN activity, the similarities to the mid-infrared spectra of deeply obscured sources (e.g. NGC4418) and AGN hot dust (e.g. NGC1068), as well as evidence from other wavelength regions, suggest that the power source hiding behind the optically thick dust screen may well be a buried AGN.
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