ASTR 5460, Wed. Apr. 30, 2003
Reminders/Assignments
Quasars and Active Galactic Nuclei

Reminders/Assignments
FIRST/NVSS and 2MASS reports
Discussion/comments/questions regarding the Physics Today Articles?
Research Homework Update
Dan finished phase 1, will start phase 2
Chris, Sey, and Cassandra primary now
Presentation topics
Read Shields “A Brief History of AGN” astro-ph/9903401
Skip astro-ph Friday -- evaluations

Presentation Topics
Last week of class, 2 Wed., 4 Fri.  WHO WHEN?
Plan for 20 minutes, plus questions.
Other astronomy faculty invited.
Topics:
Gunn-Peterson Test and Reionization
Supernovae and the Accelerating Universe
Weighing Supermassive Black Holes
The Hubble Deep Fields
Sub-millimeter (SCUBA) Galaxies
X-ray Background

Sloan Post-starburst Quasars
Background in papers/proposals
Tasks
Identify from the SDSS EDR spectra (two levels) – lots of effort now vs. later
Morphology from SDSS images (two levels)
Bruzual & Charlot ISB modeling
Quasar measurements, derived properties
Compiling statistics, correlation analyses (lots of effort later vs. now)
Oversight, science, figures/tables, etc.
Will require individual meetings

Quasars and Active Galactic Nuclei (AGNs)

The (slightly) active nucleus of our galaxy
Probable Black hole
High velocities
Large energy generation
At  a=275 AU  P=2.8 yr Þ 2.7 million solar masses
Radio image of Sgr A*
about 3 pc across, with model of surrounding disk

Active Galactic Nuclei:  AGNs
A small fraction of galaxies have extremely bright “unresolved” star-like cores (active nuclei)
Shown here is an HST image of NGC 7742, a so-called “Seyfert galaxy” after Carl Seyfert who did pioneering work in the 1940s

NGC4151 with a range of exposures

Spectra of Stars, Spectra of AGNs

Active Galactic Nuclei:  AGNs
Small fraction of galaxies have extremely
bright “unresolved” star-like nuclei
Very large energy generation
Brightness often varies quickly
Implies small size (changes not smeared out by light-travel time)
High velocities often seen (> 10,000 km/s in lines)
Emission all over the electro-magnetic spectrum
Jets seen emerging from galaxies

3C31

Many Views of Radio Galaxy Centaurus A

The Central Engine of Centaurus A
http://imgsrc.stsci.edu/op/pubinfo/pr/1998/14/content/centauf.mov

Quasar Images 1

A Quasar Tour with animations

Accretion Disks
Black hole is “active” only if gas is present to spiral into it
Isolated stars just orbit black hole same as they would any other mass
Gas collides, tries to slow due to friction, and so spirals in (and heats up)
Conservation of angular momentum causes gas to form a disk as it spirals in

Different Views of the Accretion Disk
The torus of gas and dust can block part of our view
Seyfert 2 galaxies: Edge on view
Only gas well above and below disk is visible
See only “slow” gas
Þ narrow emission lines
Seyfert 1 galaxies: Slightly tilted view
Hot high velocity gas close to black hole is visible
High velocities  
Þ broad emission lines
BL Lac objects: Pole on view
Looking right down the jet at central region
Extremely bright – vary on time scales of hours
Quasars: Very active AGN at large distances
Can barely make out the galaxy surrounding them
Were apparently more common in distant past

Different Views of the Accretion Disk
The torus of gas and dust can block part of our view
Seyfert 2 galaxies: Edge on view
Only gas well above and below disk is visible
See only “slow” gas
Þ narrow emission lines
Seyfert 1 galaxies: Slightly tilted view
Hot high velocity gas close to black hole is visible
High velocities  
Þ broad emission lines
BL Lac objects: Pole on view
Looking right down the jet at central region
Extremely bright – vary on time scales of hours
Quasars: Very active AGN at large distances
Can barely make out the galaxy surrounding them
Were apparently more common in distant past

Different Views of the Accretion Disk
The torus of gas and dust can block part of our view
Seyfert 2 galaxies: Edge on view
Only gas well above and below disk is visible
See only “slow” gas
Þ narrow emission lines
Seyfert 1 galaxies: Slightly tilted view
Hot high velocity gas close to black hole is visible
High velocities  
Þ broad emission lines
BL Lac objects: Pole on view
Looking right down the jet at central region
Extremely bright – vary on time scales of hours
Quasars: Very active AGN at large distances
Can barely make out the galaxy surrounding them
Were more common in distant past

Quasar Images II

Quasar Images III: “Starburst-Quasar”

What makes an AGN active?
Need a supply of gas to feed to the black hole
(Black holes from 1 million to >1 billion solar masses!
Scales as a few percent of galaxy bulge mass.)
Collisions disturb regular orbits of stars and gas clouds
Could feed more gas to the central region
Galactic orbits were less organized as galaxies were forming, also recall the “hierarchical” galaxy formation
Expect more gas to flow to central region when galaxies are young => Quasars (“quasar epoch” around z=2 to z=3)
Most galaxies may have massive black holes in them
They are just less active now because gas supply is less

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