ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Quasars probing quasars X: The quasar pair spectral database

119   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Joseph Findlay
 تاريخ النشر 2018
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English
 تأليف Joseph R. Findlay




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

The rare close projection of two quasars on the sky provides the opportunity to study the host galaxy environment of a foreground quasar in absorption against the continuum emission of a background quasar. For over a decade the Quasars probing quasars series has utilized this technique to further the understanding of galaxy formation and evolution in the presence of a quasar at z>2, resolving scales as small as a galactic disc and from bound gas in the circumgalactic medium to the diffuse environs of intergalactic space. Presented here, is the public release of the quasar pair spectral database utilized in these studies. In addition to projected pairs at z>2, the database also includes quasar pair members at z<2, gravitational lens candidates and quasars closely separated in redshift that are useful for small-scale clustering studies. In total the database catalogs 5627 distinct objects, with 4083 lying within 5 of at least one other source. A spectral library contains 3582 optical and near-infrared spectra for 3028 of the cataloged sources. As well as reporting on 54 newly discovered quasar pairs, we outline the key contributions made by this series over the last ten years, summarize the imaging and spectroscopic data used for target selection, discuss the target selection methodologies, describe the database content and explore some avenues for future work. Full documentation for the spectral database, including download instructions, are supplied at the following URL http://specdb.readthedocs.io/en/latest/



قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

We characterize the physical properties of the cool T ~10^4 K circumgalactic medium surrounding z ~2-3 quasar host galaxies, which are predicted to evolve into present day massive ellipticals. Using a statistical sample of 14 quasar pairs with projec ted separation < 300 kpc and high dispersion, high S/N spectra, we find extreme kinematics with low metal ion lines typically spanning ~ 500 km/s, exceeding any previously studied galactic population. The CGM is significantly enriched, even beyond the virial radius, with a median metallicity [M/H] ~ -0.6. The alpha/Fe abundance ratio is enhanced, suggesting that halo gas is primarily enriched by core-collapse supernovae. The projected cool gas mass within the virial radius is estimated to be 1.9*10^11 M_sun (R_perp/160 kpc)^2, accounting for ~ 1/3 of the galaxy halo baryonic budget. The ionization state of CGM gas increases with projected distance from the foreground quasars, contrary to expectation if the quasar dominates the ionizing radiation flux. However, we also found peculiarities not exhibited in the CGM of other galaxy populations. In one absorption system, we may be detecting unresolved fluorescent Ly-alpha emission, and another system shows strong NV lines. Taken together these anomalies suggest that transverse sightlines are at least in some cases possibly illuminated. We also discovered a peculiar case where detection of the CII* fine structure line implies an electron density > 100 cm^-3 and subparsec scale gas clumps.
We perform a survey of the X-ray properties of 41 objects from the WISE/SDSS selected Hyper-luminous (WISSH) quasars sample, composed by 86 broad-line quasars (QSOs) with bolometric luminosity $L_{Bol}geq 2times 10^{47},erg, s^{-1}$, at z~2-4. All bu t 3 QSOs show unabsorbed 2-10 keV luminosities $L_{2-10}geq10^{45} ,erg ,s^{-1}$. Thanks to their extreme radiative output across the Mid-IR-to-X-ray range, WISSH QSOs offer the opportunity to significantly extend and validate the existing relations involving $L_{2-10}$. We study $L_{2-10}$ as a function of (i) X-ray-to-Optical (X/O) flux ratio, (ii) mid-IR luminosity ($L_{MIR}$), (iii) $L_{Bol}$ as well as (iv) $alpha_{OX}$ vs. the 2500$mathring{A}$ luminosity. We find that WISSH QSOs show very low X/O(<0.1) compared to typical AGN values; $L_{2-10}/L_{MIR}$ ratios significantly smaller than those derived for AGN with lower luminosity; large X-ray bolometric corrections $k_{rm Bol,X}sim$ 100-1000; and steep $-2<alpha_{OX}<-1.7$. These results lead to a scenario where the X-ray emission of hyper-luminous quasars is relatively weaker compared to lower-luminosity AGN. Models predict that such an X-ray weakness can be relevant for the acceleration of powerful high-ionization emission line-driven winds, commonly detected in the UV spectra of WISSH QSOs, which can in turn perturb the X-ray corona and weaken its emission. Accordingly, hyper-luminous QSOs represent the ideal laboratory to study the link between the AGN energy output and wind acceleration. Additionally, WISSH QSOs show very large BH masses ($log[M_{rm BH}/M_{odot}]$>9.5). This enables a more robust modeling of the $Gamma-M_{BH}$ relation by increasing the statistics at high masses. We derive a flatter $Gamma$ dependence than previously found over the broad range 5 <$log(M_{rm BH}/M_{odot})$ < 11.
We survey the incidence and absorption strength of the metal-line transitions CII 1334 and CIV from the circumgalactic medium (CGM) surrounding z~2 quasars, which act as signposts for massive dark matter halos M_halo~10^12.5 Msun. On scales of the vi rial radius (Mvir~160kpc), we measure a high covering fraction fC=0.73+/-0.10 to strong CII absorption (rest equivalent width W1334>0.2A), implying a massive reservoir of cool (T~10^4K) metal enriched gas. We conservatively estimate a metal mass exceeding 10^8 Msun. We propose these metals trace enrichment of the incipient intragroup/intracluster medium that these halos eventually inhabit. This cool CGM around quasars is the pinnacle amongst galaxies observed at all epochs, as regards covering fraction and average equivalent width of HI Lya and low-ion metal absorption. We argue that the properties of this cool CGM primarily reflect the halo mass, and that other factors such as feedback, star-formation rate, and accretion from the intergalactic medium are secondary. We further estimate, that the CGM of massive, z~2 galaxies accounts for the majority of strong MgII absorption along random quasar sightlines. Lastly, we detect an excess of strong CIV absorption (W1548>0.3A) over random incidence to 1Mpc physical impact parameter and measure the quasar-CIV cross-correlation function: xi(r)=(r/r0)^-g with r0 = 7.5Mpc and g=1.7. Consistent with previous work on larger scales, we infer that this highly ionized CIV gas traces massive (10^12 Msun) halos.
With close pairs of quasars at different redshifts, a background quasar sightline can be used to study a foreground quasars environment in absorption. We search 149 moderate resolution background quasar spectra, from Gemini, Keck, the MMT, and the SD SS to survey Lyman Limit Systems (LLSs) and Damped Ly-alpha systems (DLAs) in the vicinity of 1.8 < z < 4.0 luminous foreground quasars. A sample of 27 new quasar-absorber pairs is uncovered with column densities, 17.2 < log (N_HI/cm^2) < 20.9, and transverse (proper) distances of 22 kpc/h < R < 1.7 Mpc/h, from the foreground quasars. If they emit isotropically, the implied ionizing photon fluxes are a factor of ~ 5-8000 times larger than the ambient extragalactic UV background over this range of distances. The observed probability of intercepting an absorber is very high for small separations: six out of eight projected sightlines with transverse separations R < 150 kpc/h have an absorber coincident with the foreground quasar, of which four have log N_HI > 10^19. The covering factor of log N_HI > 10^19 absorbers is thus ~ 50 % (4/8) on these small scales, whereas < 2% would have been expected at random. There are many cosmological applications of these new sightlines: they provide laboratories for studying fluorescent Ly-alpha recombination radiation from LLSs, constrain the environments, emission geometry, and radiative histories of quasars, and shed light on the physical nature of LLSs and DLAs.
With close pairs of quasars at different redshifts, a background quasar sightline can be used to study a foreground quasars environment in absorption. We used a sample of 17 Lyman limit systems with column density N_HI > 10^19 cm^-2 selected from 149 projected quasar pair sightlines, to investigate the clustering pattern of optically thick absorbers around luminous quasars at z ~ 2.5. Specifically, we measured the quasar-absorber correlation function in the transverse direction, and found a comoving correlation length of r_0=9.2_{+1.5}_{-1.7} Mpc/h (comoving) assuming a power law correlation function, with gamma=1.6. Applying this transverse clustering strength to the line-of-sight, would predict that ~ 15-50% of all quasars should show a N_HI > 10^19 cm^-2 absorber within a velocity window of v < 3000 km/s. This overpredicts the number of absorbers along the line-of-sight by a large factor, providing compelling evidence that the clustering pattern of optically thick absorbers around quasars is highly anisotropic. The most plausible explanationfor the anisotropy is that the transverse direction is less likely to be illuminated by ionizing photons than the line-of-sight, and that absorbers along the line-of-sight are being photoevaporated. A simple model for the photoevaporation of absorbers subject to the ionizing flux of a quasar is presented, and it is shown that absorbers with volume densities n_H < 0.1 cm^-3 will be photoevaporated if they lie within ~ 1 Mpc (proper) of a luminous quasar. Using this simple model, we illustrate how comparisons of the transverse and line-of-sight clustering around quasars can ultimately be used to constrain the distribution of gas in optically thick absorption line systems.
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