ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

BLR Physical Conditions in Extreme Population A Quasars: a Method to Estimate Central Black Hole Mass at High Redshift

107   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Alenka Negrete
 تاريخ النشر 2011
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English
 تأليف Alenka Negrete




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

We describe a method for determination of physical conditions in the broad line regions of a significant subsample of Seyfert-1 nuclei and quasars. Several diagnostic ratios based on intermediate (AlIII 1860, SiIII 1892) and high (CIV 1549, SiIV 1397) ionization lines in the UV spectra of quasars are used to constrain density, ionization and metallicity of the emitting gas. We apply the method to two extreme Population A quasars - the prototypical NLSy1 I Zw 1 and a high-z NLSy1-like object, SDSS J120144.36+011611.6. We find well-defined physical conditions: low ionization (ionization parameter $< 10^{-2}$), high density (10$^{12} - 10^{13}$ cm^{-3}) and significant metal enrichment. Ionization parameter and density can be derived independently for each source with an uncertainty that is always less than $pm 0.3$ in logarithm. We use the product density times ionization parameter to estimate the broad line region radius and the virial black hole mass. Estimates of black hole masses based on the photoionization analysis described in this paper are probably more accurate than those derived from the radius - luminosity correlation.



قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

We present high S/N UV spectra for eight quasars at $zsim3$ obtained with VLT/FORS. The spectra enable us to analyze in detail the strongest emission features in the rest-frame range 1400-2000 AA of each source (ciii, siiii, aliii, siii, civ and siiv ). Previous work indicates that a component of these lines is emitted in a region with well-defined properties i.e., a high density and low ionization emitting region). Flux ratios aliii/siiii, civ/aliii, siiv/siiii, civ/siiv and siii/siiii for this region permit us to strongly constrain electron density, ionization parameter and metallicity through the use of diagnostic maps built from {sc CLOUDY} simulations. Reliable estimates of the product density times ionization parameter allow us to derive the radius of the broad line region rb from the definition of the ionization parameter. The rb estimate and the assumption of virialized motions in the line emitting gas yields an estimate for black hole mass. We compare our results with estimates obtained from the rb -- luminosity correlation customarily employed to estimate black hole masses of high redshift quasars.
Context:Quasars radiating at extreme Eddington ratios (xA) are likely a prime mover of galactic evolution and have been hailed as potential distance indicators. Their properties are still scarcely known. Aims:We test the effectiveness of the select ion criteria defined on the 4D Eigenvector 1 (4DE1) for identifying xA sources. We provide a quantitative description of their UV spectra in the redshift range 2<z<2.9. Methods:19 extreme quasar candidates were identified using 4DE1 selection criteria applied to SDSS spectra: AlIII1860/SiIII]1892>0.5 and CIII]1909/SiIII]1892<1. The emission line spectra was studied using multicomponent fits of deep spectroscopic observations obtained with the OSIRIS-GTC. Results:Spectra confirm that almost all of these quasars are xA sources with very similar properties. We provide spectrophotometric and line profile measurements for the SiIV1397+OIV]1402, CIV1549+HeII1640, and the 1900A blend composed by AlIII1860, SiIII]1892, FeIII and a weak CIII]1909. The spectra can be characterized as very low ionization (logU~-3), a condition that explains the significant FeIII emission. CIV1549 shows low equivalent width (<30 A for the most sources), and high or extreme blueshift amplitudes (-5000<c(1/2)<-1000 kms-1). Weak-lined quasars appear as extreme xA quasars and not as an independent class. The CIV1549 high amplitude blueshifts coexists in all cases save one with symmetric and narrower AlIII and SiIII] profiles. Estimates of the Eddington ratio using the AlIII FWHM as a virial broadening estimator are consistent with the ones of a previous xA sample. Conclusions:It is now feasible to assemble large samples of xA quasars from the latest data releases of the SDSS. We provide evidence that AlIII1860 could be associated with a low-ionization virialized sub-system, supporting previous suggestions that AlIII is a reliable virial broadening estimator.
We present the analysis of optical and near-infrared spectra of the only four $z>6.5$ quasars known to date, discovered in the UKIDSS-LAS and VISTA-VIKING surveys. Our data-set consists of new VLT/X-Shooter and Magellan/FIRE observations. These are t he best optical/NIR spectroscopic data that are likely to be obtained for the $z>6.5$ sample using current $6$ - $10$ m facilities. We estimate the black hole mass, the Eddington ratio, and the SiIV/CIV, CIII]/CIV, and FeII/MgII emission-line flux ratios. We perform spectral modeling using a procedure that allows us to derive a probability distribution for the continuum components and to obtain the quasar properties weighted upon the underlying distribution of continuum models. The $z>6.5$ quasars show the same emission properties as their counterparts at lower redshifts. The $z>6.5$ quasars host black holes with masses of $sim 10^9$ M$_{odot}$ that are accreting close to the Eddington luminosity ($langle{rm log} (L_{rm Bol}/L_{rm Edd})rangle= -0.4pm0.2$), in agreement with what has been observed for a sample of $4.0<z<6.5$ quasars. By comparing the SiIV/CIV and CIII]/CIV flux ratios with the results obtained from luminosity-matched samples at $zsim6$ and $2leq zleq4.5$, we find no evidence of evolution of the line ratios with cosmic time. We compare the measured FeII/MgII flux ratios with those obtained for a sample of $4.0<z<6.4$ sources. The two samples are analyzed using a consistent procedure. There is no evidence that the FeII/MgII flux ratio evolves between $z=7$ and $z=4$. Under the assumption that the FeII/MgII traces the Fe/Mg abundance ratio, this implies the presence of major episodes of chemical enrichment in the quasar hosts in the first $sim0.8$ Gyr after the Big Bang.
Several investigations of the X-ray variability of active galactic nuclei (AGN) using the normalised excess variance (${sigma^2_{rm NXS}}$) parameter have shown that variability has a strong anti-correlation with black hole mass ($M_{rm BH}$) and X-r ay luminosity ($L_{rm X}$). In this study we confirm these previous correlations and find no evidence of a redshift evolution. Using observations from XMM-Newton, we determine the ${sigma^2_{rm NXS}}$ and $L_{rm X}$ for a sample of 1091 AGN drawn from the XMM-Newton Cluster Survey (XCS) - making this the largest study of X-ray spectral properties of AGNs. We created light-curves in three time-scales; 10 ks, 20 ks and 40 ks and used these to derive scaling relations between ${sigma^2_{rm NXS}}$, $L_{rm X}$ (2.0-10 keV range) and literature estimates of $M_{rm BH}$ from reverberation mapping. We confirm the anti-correlation between $M_{rm BH}$ and ${sigma^2_{rm NXS}}$ and find a positive correlation between $M_{rm BH}$ and $L_{rm X}$. The use of ${sigma^2_{rm NXS}}$ is practical only for pointed observations where the observation time is tens of kiloseconds. For much shorter observations one cannot accurately quantify variability to estimate $M_{rm BH}$. Here we describe a method to derive $L_{rm X}$ from short duration observations and used these results as an estimate for $M_{rm BH}$. We find that it is possible to estimate $L_{rm X}$ from observations of just a few hundred seconds and that when correlated with $M_{rm BH}$, the relation is statistically similar to the relation of $M_{rm BH}$-$L_{rm X}$ derived from a spectroscopic analysis of full XMM observations. This method may be particularly useful to the eROSITA mission, an all-sky survey, which will detect $>$10$^{6}$ AGN.
401 - Hagai Netzer 2007
We present new H and K bands spectroscopy of 15 high luminosity active galactic nuclei (AGNs) at redshifts 2.3-3.4 obtained on Gemini South. We combined the data with spectra of additional 29 high-luminosity sources to obtain a sample with 10^{45.2}< lambda L_{lambda}(5100A)<10^{47.3} ergs/sec and black hole (BH) mass range, using reverberation mapping relationships based on the H_beta method, of 10^{8.8}-10^{10.7} M_sun. We do not find a correlation of L/L_Edd with M_BH but find a correlation with lambda L_{lambda}(5100A) which might be due to selection effects. The L/L_Edd distribution is broad and covers the range ~0.07-1.6, similar to what is observed in lower redshift, lower luminosity AGNs. We suggest that this consistently measured and calibrated sample gives the best representation of L/L_Edd at those redshifts and note potential discrepancies with recent theoretical and observational studies. The lower accretion rates are not in accord with growth scenarios for BHs at such redshifts and the growth times of many of the sources are longer than the age of the universe at the corresponding epochs. This suggests earlier episodes of faster growth at z>~3 for those sources. The use of the C IV method gives considerably different results and a larger scatter; this method seems to be a poor M_BH and L/L_Edd estimator at very high luminosity.
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا