ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
We use Virtual Observatory (VO) tools to identify optically faint, obscured (i.e., type 2) active galactic nuclei (AGN) in the two Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey (GOODS) fields. By employing publicly available X-ray and optical data and catalogues we discover 68 type 2 AGN candidates. The X-ray powers of these sources are estimated by using a previously known correlation between X-ray luminosity and X-ray-to-optical flux ratio. Thirty-one of our candidates have high estimated powers (Lx > 10^44 erg/s) and therefore qualify as optically obscured quasars, the so-called ``QSO 2. Based on the derived X-ray powers, our candidates are likely to be at relatively high redshifts, z ~ 3, with the QSO 2 at z ~ 4. By going ~ 3 magnitudes fainter than previously known type 2 AGN in the two GOODS fields we are sampling a region of redshift - power space which was previously unreachable with classical methods. Our method brings to 40 the number of QSO 2 in the GOODS fields, an improvement of a factor ~ 4 when compared to the only 9 such sources previously known. We derive a QSO 2 surface density down to 10^-15 erg/cm^2/s in the 0.5 - 8 keV band of >~ 330/deg^2, ~ 30% of which is made up of previously known sources. This is larger than current estimates and some predictions and suggests that the surface density of QSO 2 at faint flux limits has been underestimated. This work demonstrates that VO tools are mature enough to produce cutting-edge science results by exploiting astronomical data beyond ``classical identification limits (R <~ 25) with interoperable tools for statistical identification of sources using multiwavelength information.
Ultracool dwarfs (UCDs) are objects with spectral types equal or later than M7. Most of them have been discovered using wide-field imaging surveys. The Virtual Observatory (VO) has proven to be of great utility to efficiently exploit these astronomic
We use MUSE/VLT to conduct a survey of $zsim3$ physical quasar pairs at close separation with a fast observation strategy. Our aim is twofold: (i) explore the Ly$alpha$ glow around the faint-end of the quasar population; (ii) take advantage of the co
Aims. This study focuses on very luminous Mbol<-6.0 mag AGB stars with J-Ks>1.5 mag and H-Ks>0.4 mag in the LMC, SMC, M31, and M33 from 2MASS data. Methods.The data were taken from the 2MASS All-Sky Point Source catalogue archive. We used Virtual O
The Data Center Helper Suite DaCHS is an integrated publication package for building Virtual Observatory (VO) and Web services, supporting the entire workflow from ingestion to data mapping to service definition. It implements all major data discover
We present a search for CO emission in a sample of ten type-2 quasar host galaxies with redshifts of z=0.1-0.4. We detect CO(J=1-0) line emission with >=5sigma in the velocity integrated intensity maps of five sources. A sixth source shows a tentativ