ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Black Hole Masses in Three Seyfert Galaxies

121   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Christopher Onken
 تاريخ النشر 2002
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English
 تأليف C.A. Onken




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

We analyze published reverberation mapping data for three Seyfert galaxies (NGC 3227, NGC 3516, and NGC 4593) to refine the mass estimate for the supermassive black hole in the center of each object. Treatment of the data in a manner more consistent with other large compilations of such masses allows us to more securely compare our results to wider samples of data, e.g., in the investigation of the M_bh-sigma relationship for active and quiescent galaxies.

قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

99 - K. D. Denney 2010
We present the final results from a high sampling rate, multi-month, spectrophotometric reverberation mapping campaign undertaken to obtain either new or improved Hbeta reverberation lag measurements for several relatively low-luminosity AGNs. We hav e reliably measured thetime delay between variations in the continuum and Hbeta emission line in six local Seyfert 1 galaxies. These measurements are used to calculate the mass of the supermassive black hole at the center of each of these AGNs. We place our results in context to the most current calibration of the broad-line region (BLR) R-L relationship, where our results remove outliers and reduce the scatter at the low-luminosity end of this relationship. We also present velocity-resolved Hbeta time delay measurements for our complete sample, though the clearest velocity-resolved kinematic signatures have already been published.
99 - Wei-Hao Bian 2008
The second moment of the H$beta$ emission line is calculated for 329 narrow line Seyfert 1 galaxies (NLS1s) selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), which is used to calculate the central supermassive black hole (SMBHs) mass of each. We fin d that the second moment depends strongly on the broader component of the H$beta$ line profile. We find that for the NLS1s requiring two Gaussians to fit the H$beta$ line the mean value of the SMBH mass from the H$beta$ second moment is larger by about 0.50 dex than that from the full width at half maximum (FWHM). Using the gas velocity dispersion of the core/narrow component of oiii $lambda$ 5007 to estimate the stellar velocity dispersion, $sigma_{*}$, the new mass makes NLS1s fall very close to the $mbh - sigma_{*}$ relation for normal AGNs. By using $sigma_{*}$ measured directly from SDSS spectra with a simple stellar population synthesis method, we find that for NLS1s with mass lower than $10^7 msun$, they fall only marginally below the $mbh - sigma_{*}$ relation considering the large scatter in the mass calculation.
We present estimates of black hole accretion rates and nuclear, extended, and total star-formation rates for a complete sample of Seyfert galaxies. Using data from the Spitzer Space Telescope, we measure the active galactic nucleus (AGN) luminosity u sing the [O IV] 25.89 micron emission line and the star-forming luminosity using the 11.3 micron aromatic feature and extended 24 micron continuum emission. We find that black hole growth is strongly correlated with nuclear (r<1 kpc) star formation, but only weakly correlated with extended (r>1 kpc) star formation in the host galaxy. In particular, the nuclear star-formation rate (SFR) traced by the 11.3 micron aromatic feature follows a relationship with the black hole accretion rate (BHAR) of the form SFRproptoBHAR^0.8, with an observed scatter of 0.5 dex. This SFR-BHAR relationship persists when additional star formation in physically matched r=1 kpc apertures is included, taking the form SFRproptoBHAR^0.6. However, the relationship becomes almost indiscernible when total SFRs are considered. This suggests a physical connection between the gas on sub-kpc and sub-pc scales in local Seyfert galaxies that is not related to external processes in the host galaxy. It also suggests that the observed scaling between star formation and black hole growth for samples of AGNs will depend on whether the star formation is dominated by a nuclear or extended component. We estimate the integrated black hole and bulge growth that occurs in these galaxies and find that an AGN duty cycle of 5-10% would maintain the ratio between black hole and bulge masses seen in the local universe.
Observations of local galaxies harbouring supermassive black holes (BHs) of anomalously high mass, M_BH, relative to their stellar mass, M_star, appear to be at odds with simple models of the co-evolution between galaxies and their central BHs. We st udy the origin of such outliers in a Lambda cold dark matter context using the EAGLE cosmological, hydrodynamical simulation. We find 15 M_BH(M_star)-outlier galaxies, defined as having M_BH more than 1.5 dex above the median M_BH(M_star) relation in the simulation, M_{BH,med}. All M_BH(M_star)-outliers are satellite galaxies, typically with M_star ~ 10^10 M_sun and M_BH ~ 10^8 M_sun. They have all become outliers due to a combination of tidal stripping of their outer stellar component acting over several Gyr and early formation times leading to rapid BH growth at high redshift, with the former mechanism being most important for 67 per cent of these outliers. The same mechanisms also cause the M_BH(M_star)-outlier satellites to be amongst the most compact galaxies in the simulation, making them ideal candidates for ultracompact dwarf galaxy progenitors. The 10 most extreme central galaxies found at z=0 (with log_{10}(M_BH/M_{BH,med}) in [1.2, 1.5]) grow rapidly in M_BH to lie well above the present-day M_BH-M_star relation at early times (z > 2), and either continue to evolve parallel to the z=0 relation or remain unchanged until the present day, making them relics of the high-redshift universe. This high-z formation mechanism may help to explain the origin of observed M_BH(M_star)-outliers with extended dark matter haloes and undisturbed morphologies.
We present near-IR photometry and spectroscopy of 30 extremely luminous radio and mid-IR selected galaxies. With bolometric luminosities exceeding $sim10^{13}$ $rm{L_{odot}}$ and redshifts ranging from $z = 0.880-2.853$, we use VLT instruments X-shoo ter and ISAAC to investigate this unique population of galaxies. Broad multi-component emission lines are detected in 18 galaxies and we measure the near-IR lines $rm{Hrm{beta}}$, $text{[OIII]}rm{lambda}rm{lambda}4959,5007$ and $rm{Hrm{alpha}}$ in six, 15 and 13 galaxies respectively, with 10 $rm{Lyalpha}$ and five CIV lines additionally detected in the UVB arm. We use the broad $text{[OIII]}rm{lambda}5007$ emission lines as a proxy for the bolometric AGN luminosity, and derive lower limits to supermassive black hole masses of $10^{7.9}$-$10^{9.4}$ $text{M}_{odot}$ with expectations of corresponding host masses of $10^{10.4}$-$10^{12.0}$ $text{M}_{odot}$. We measure $rm{lambda}_{Edd}$ > 1 for eight of these sources at a $2sigma$ significance. Near-IR photometry and SED fitting are used to compare stellar masses directly. We detect both Balmer lines in five galaxies and use these to infer a mean visual extinction of $A_{V}$ = 2.68 mag. Due to non-detections and uncertainties in our $rm{Hrm{beta}}$ emission line measurements, we simulate a broad $rm{Hrm{beta}}$ line of FWHM = 1480 $rm{kms^{-1}}$ to estimate extinction for all sources with measured $rm{Hrm{alpha}}$ emission. We then use this to infer a mean $A_{V}=3.62$ mag, demonstrating the highly-obscured nature of these galaxies, with the consequence of increasing our estimates of black-hole masses by an 0.5 orders of magnitude in the most extreme and obscured cases.
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