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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The evolution of active galactic nuclei in clusters of galaxies from the Dark Energy Survey

Bufanda, E., Hollowood, D., Jeltema, T. E., Rykoff, E. S., Rozo, E., Martini, P., Abbott, T. M. C., Abdalla, F. B., Allam, S., Banerji, M., Benoit-Lévy, A., Bertin, E., Brooks, D., Carnero Rosell, A., Carrasco Kind, M., Carretero, J., Cunha, C. E., da Costa, L. N., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Dietrich, J. P., Evrard, A. E., Fausti Neto, A., Flaugher, B., Frieman, J., Gerdes, D. W., Goldstein, D. A., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Kuropatkin, N., Lima, M., Maia, M. A. G., Marshall, J. L., Melchior, P., Miquel, R., Mohr, J. J., Ogando, R., Plazas, A. A., Romer, A. K., Rooney, P., Sanchez, E., Santiago, B., Scarpine, V., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Smith, R. C., Soares-Santos, M., Sobreira, F., Suchyta, E., Tarle, G., Thomas, D., Tucker, D. L., Walker, A. R. 01 March 2017 (has links)
The correlation between active galactic nuclei (AGNs) and environment provides important clues to AGN fuelling and the relationship of black hole growth to galaxy evolution. In this paper, we analyse the fraction of galaxies in clusters hosting AGN as a function of redshift and cluster richness for X-ray-detected AGN associated with clusters of galaxies in Dark Energy Survey (DES) Science Verification data. The present sample includes 33 AGNs with LX > 1043 erg s(-1) in non-central, host galaxies with luminosity greater than 0.5L(*) from a total sample of 432 clusters in the redshift range of 0.1< z <0.95. Analysis of the present sample reveals that the AGN fraction in red-sequence cluster members has a strong positive correlation with redshift such that the AGN fraction increases by a factor of similar to 8 from low to high redshift, and the fraction of cluster galaxies hosting AGN at high redshifts is greater than the low-redshift fraction at 3.6 sigma. In particular, the AGN fraction increases steeply at the highest redshifts in our sample at z > 0.7. This result is in good agreement with previous work and parallels the increase in star formation in cluster galaxies over the same redshift range. However, the AGN fraction in clusters is observed to have no significant correlation with cluster mass. Future analyses with DES Year 1 through Year 3 data will be able to clarify whether AGN activity is correlated to cluster mass and will tightly constrain the relationship between cluster AGN populations and redshift.
2

OBSCURED AGNs IN BULGELESS HOSTS DISCOVERED BY WISE : THE CASE STUDY OF SDSS J1224+5555

Satyapal, S., Secrest, N. J., Rothberg, B., O’Connor, J. A., Ellison, S. L., Hickox, R. C., Constantin, A., Gliozzi, M., Rosenberg, and J. L. 08 August 2016 (has links)
There is mounting evidence that supermassive black holes (SMBHs) form and grow in bulgeless galaxies. However, a robust determination of the fraction of active galactic nuclei (AGNs) in bulgeless galaxies, an important constraint to models of SMBH seed formation and merger-free models of AGN fueling, is unknown, since optical studies have been shown to be incomplete for AGNs in low-mass galaxies. In a recent study using the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, we discovered hundreds of bulgeless galaxies that display mid-infrared signatures of extremely hot dust suggestive of powerful accreting massive black holes, despite having no signatures of black hole activity at optical wavelengths. Here we report X-ray follow-up observations of J122434.66+555522.3, a nearby (z = 0.052) isolated bulgeless galaxy that contains an unresolved X-ray source detected at the 3 sigma level by XMM-Newton with an observed luminosity uncorrected for intrinsic absorption of L2-10 (keV) = (1.1 +/- 0.4) x 10(40) erg s(-1). Ground-based near-infrared spectroscopy with the Large Binocular Telescope and multiwavelength observations from ultraviolet to millimeter wavelengths together suggest that J1224+5555 harbors a highly absorbed AGN with an intrinsic absorption of N-H > 10(24) cm(-2). The hard X-ray luminosity of the putative AGN corrected for absorption is L2-10 keV similar to 3 x 10(42) erg s(-1), which, depending on the bolometric correction factor, corresponds to a bolometric luminosity of the AGN of L-bol 6 x 10(43)-3 x 10(44) erg s(-1). and a lower mass limit for the black hole of M-BH similar or equal to 2 x 10(6) M-circle dot, based on the Eddington limit. While enhanced X-ray emission and hot dust can be produced by star formation in extremely low metallicity environments typical in dwarf galaxies, J1224+5555 has a stellar mass of similar to 2.0 x 10(10) M-circle dot and an above solar metallicity (12 + logO/H = 9.11), typical of our WISE-selected bulgeless galaxy. sample. While collectively. these observations suggest the presence of an AGN, we caution that identifying obscured AGNs in the low-luminosity regime is challenging. and often requires multiwavelength observations. These observations suggest that low-luminosity AGNs can be heavily obscured and reside in optically quiescent galaxies, adding to the growing body of evidence that the fraction of bulgeless galaxies with accreting black holes may be significantly underestimated based on optical studies.
3

CANDELS: Elevated Black Hole Growth in the Progenitors of Compact Quiescent Galaxies at z ∼ 2

Kocevski, Dale D., Barro, Guillermo, Faber, S. M., Dekel, Avishai, Somerville, Rachel S., Young, Joshua A., Williams, Christina C., McIntosh, Daniel H., Georgakakis, Antonis, Hasinger, Guenther, Nandra, Kirpal, Civano, Francesca, Alexander, David M., Almaini, Omar, Conselice, Christopher J., Donley, Jennifer L., Ferguson, Harry C., Giavalisco, Mauro, Grogin, Norman A., Hathi, Nimish, Hawkins, Matthew, Koekemoer, Anton M., Koo, David C., McGrath, Elizabeth J., Mobasher, Bahram, Pérez González, Pablo G., Pforr, Janine, Primack, Joel R., Santini, Paola, Stefanon, Mauro, Trump, Jonathan R., van der Wel, Arjen, Wuyts, Stijn, Yan, Haojing 07 September 2017 (has links)
We examine the fraction of massive (M-* > 10(10)M(circle dot)) compact star-forming galaxies (cSFGs) that host an active galactic nucleus (AGN) at z similar to 2. These cSFGs are likely the direct progenitors of the compact quiescent galaxies observed at this epoch, which are the first population of passive galaxies to appear in large numbers in the early Universe. We identify cSFGs that host an AGN using a combination of Hubble WFC3 imaging and Chandra X-ray observations in four fields: the Chandra Deep Fields, the Extended Groth Strip, and the UKIDSS Ultra Deep Survey field. We find that 39.2(-3.6)(+3.9)% (65/166) of cSFGs at 1.4 < z < 3.0 host an X-ray detected AGN. This fraction is 3.2 times higher than the incidence of AGN in extended star-forming galaxies with similar masses at these redshifts. This difference is significant at the 6.2 sigma level. Our results are consistent with models in which cSFGs are formed through a dissipative contraction that triggers a compact starburst and concurrent growth of the central black hole. We also discuss our findings in the context of cosmological galaxy evolution simulations that require feedback energy to rapidly quench cSFGs. We show that the AGN fraction peaks precisely where energy injection is needed to reproduce the decline in the number density of cSFGs with redshift. Our results suggest that the first abundant population of massive quenched galaxies emerged directly following a phase of elevated supermassive black hole growth and further hints at a possible connection between AGN and the rapid quenching of star formation in these galaxies.
4

SPIDERS: the spectroscopic follow-up of X-ray-selected clusters of galaxies in SDSS-IV

Clerc, N., Merloni, A., Zhang, Y.-Y., Finoguenov, A., Dwelly, T., Nandra, K., Collins, C., Dawson, K., Kneib, J.-P., Rozo, E., Rykoff, E., Sadibekova, T., Brownstein, J., Lin, Y.-T., Ridl, J., Salvato, M., Schwope, A., Steinmetz, M., Seo, H.-J., Tinker, J. 21 December 2016 (has links)
SPIDERS (The SPectroscopic IDentification of eROSITA Sources) is a programme dedicated to the homogeneous and complete spectroscopic follow-up of X-ray active galactic nuclei and galaxy clusters over a large area (similar to 7500 deg(2)) of the extragalactic sky. SPIDERS is part of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS)-IV project, together with the Extended Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey and the Time-Domain Spectroscopic Survey. This paper describes the largest project within SPIDERS before the launch of eROSITA: an optical spectroscopic survey of X-ray-selected, massive (similar to 10(14)-10(15) M-circle dot) galaxy clusters discovered in ROSAT and XMM-Newton imaging. The immediate aim is to determine precise (Delta(z) similar to 0.001) redshifts for 4000-5000 of these systems out to z similar to 0.6. The scientific goal of the program is precision cosmology, using clusters as probes of large-scale structure in the expanding Universe. We present the cluster samples, target selection algorithms and observation strategies. We demonstrate the efficiency of selecting targets using a combination of SDSS imaging data, a robust red-sequence finder and a dedicated prioritization scheme. We describe a set of algorithms and work-flow developed to collate spectra and assign cluster membership, and to deliver catalogues of spectroscopically confirmed clusters. We discuss the relevance of line-of-sight velocity dispersion estimators for the richer systems. We illustrate our techniques by constructing a catalogue of 230 spectroscopically validated clusters (0.031 < z < 0.658), found in pilot observations. We discuss two potential science applications of the SPIDERS sample: the study of the X-ray luminosity-velocity dispersion (L-X-sigma) relation and the building of stacked phase-space diagrams.
5

The Hot Gas Exhaust of Starburst Engines in Mergers: Testing Models of Stellar Feedback and Star Formation Regulation

Smith, Beverly J., Wagstaff, Peter, Struck, Curtis, Soria, Roberto, Dunn, Brianne, Swartz, Douglas, Giroux, Mark L. 01 January 2019 (has links)
Using archival data from the Chandra X-ray telescope, we have measured the spatial extent of the hot interstellar gas in a sample of 49 nearby interacting galaxy pairs, mergers, and merger remnants. For systems with SFR > 1 M yr-1, the volume and mass of hot gas are strongly and linearly correlated with the star formation rate (SFR). This supports the idea that stellar/supernovae feedback dominates the production of hot gas in these galaxies. We compared the mass of X-ray-emitting hot gas M X(gas) with the molecular and atomic hydrogen interstellar gas masses in these galaxies (MH2 and MH i, respectively), using published carbon monoxide and 21 cm H i measurements. Systems with higher SFRs have larger M X(gas)/(MH2 + M H i) ratios on average, in agreement with recent numerical simulations of star formation and feedback in merging galaxies. The M X(gas)/( MH2 + M H i) ratio also increases with dust temperature on average. The ratio M X(gas)/SFR is anticorrelated with the Infrared Astronomical Satellite 60-100 μm flux ratio and with the Spitzer 3.6-24 μm color. These trends may be due to variations in the spatial density of young stars, the stellar age, the ratio of young to old stars, the initial mass function, and/or the efficiency of stellar feedback. Galaxies with low SFR (<1 M ⊙ yr-1) and high K band luminosities may have an excess of hot gas relative to the relation for higher SFR galaxies, while galaxies with low K band luminosities (and therefore low stellar masses) may have a deficiency in hot gas, but our sample is not large enough for strong statistical significance.
6

Testing for Shock-heated X-Ray Gas around Compact Steep Spectrum Radio Galaxies

O’Dea, C. P., Worrall, D. M., Tremblay, G. R., Clarke, T. E., Rothberg, B., Baum, S. A., Christiansen, K. P., Mullarkey, C. A., Noel-Storr, J., Mittal, R. 15 December 2017 (has links)
We present Chandra and XMM-Newton X-ray, Very Large Array (VLA) radio, and optical observations of three candidate compact steep spectrum (CSS) radio galaxies. CSS sources are of a galactic scale and are presumably driving a shock through the interstellar medium (ISM) of their host galaxy. B3 1445+410 is a low-excitation emission line CSS radio galaxy with possibly a hybrid Fanaroff-Riley FRI/II (or fat double) radio morphology. The Chandra observations reveal a point-like source that is well fit with a power law consistent with the emission from a Doppler boosted core. 3C 268.3 is a CSS broad-line radio galaxy (BLRG) whose Chandra data are consistent spatially with a point source centered on the nucleus and spectrally with a double power-law model. PKS B1017-325 is a low-excitation emission line radio galaxy with a bent double radio morphology. While from our new spectroscopic redshift, PKS B1017-325 falls outside the formal definition of a CSS, the XMM-Newton observations are consistent with ISM emission with either a contribution from hot shocked gas or non-thermal jet emission. We compile selected radio and X-ray properties of the nine bona fide CSS radio galaxies with X-ray detections so far. We find that two out of the nine show X-ray spectroscopic evidence for hot shocked gas. We note that the counts in the sources are low and that the properties of the two sources with evidence for hot shocked gas are typical of the other CSS radio galaxies. We suggest that hot shocked gas may be typical of CSS radio galaxies due to their propagation through their host galaxies.
7

Buried AGNs in Advanced Mergers: Mid-infrared Color Selection as a Dual AGN Candidate Finder

Satyapal, Shobita, Secrest, Nathan J., Ricci, Claudio, Ellison, Sara L., Rothberg, Barry, Blecha, Laura, Constantin, Anca, Gliozzi, Mario, McNulty, Paul, Ferguson, Jason 23 October 2017 (has links)
A direct consequence of hierarchical galaxy formation is the existence of dual supermassive black holes, which may be preferentially triggered as active galactic nuclei (AGNs) during galaxy mergers. Despite decades of searching, however, dual AGNs are extremely rare, and most have been discovered serendipitously. Using the all-sky WISE survey, we identified a population of over 100 morphologically identified interacting galaxies or mergers that display red mid-infrared colors often associated in extragalactic sources with powerful AGNs. The vast majority of these advanced mergers are optically classified as star-forming galaxies, which suggests that they may represent an obscured population of AGNs that cannot be found through optical studies. In this work, we present Chandra/ACIS observations and near-infrared spectra with the Large Binocular Telescope of six advanced mergers with projected pair separations less than similar to 10 kpc. The combined X-ray, near-infrared, and mid-infrared properties of these mergers provide confirmation that four out of the six mergers host at least one AGN, with four of the mergers possibly hosting dual AGNs with projected separations less than similar to 10 kpc, despite showing no firm evidence for AGNs based on optical spectroscopic studies. Our results demonstrate that (1) optical studies miss a significant fraction of single and dual AGNs in advanced mergers, and (2) mid-infrared pre-selection is extremely effective in identifying dual AGN candidates in late-stage mergers. Our multi-wavelength observations suggest that the buried AGNs in these mergers are highly absorbed, with intrinsic column densities in excess of similar to N-H > 10(24) cm(-2), consistent with hydrodynamic simulations.
8

Understanding X-ray reflection as a probe of accreting black holes

Wilkins, Daniel Richard January 2013 (has links)
The reflection of the X-rays emitted from a corona of energetic particles surrounding an accreting black hole from the accretion disc is investigated in the context of probing the structure of the central regions as well as the physical processes that power some of the brightest objects seen in the Universe. A method is devised to measure the emissivity profile of the accretion disc, that is the reflected flux as a function of radius in the disc. This method exploits the variation in the Doppler and gravitational redshift of emission from different radii in the disc to fit the observed reflection spectrum as the sum of contributions from successive radii and is applied to X-ray spectra of the narrow line Seyfert 1 galaxies 1H 0707-495, IRAS 13224-3809 and MCG-6-30-15 as well as the Galactic X-ray binary, Cygnus X-1. This illumination pattern of the accretion disc is a sensitive probe of the geometry of the corona that is illuminating the disc. A formalism is developed in which systematic ray tracing simulations can be run between X-ray emitting coronae and the accretion disc for a range of source geometries and other physical parameters, allowing observable data products to be simulated that can be directly compared to data from astrophysical black holes, in order to determine how these parameters affect the observed data, allowing them to be constrained observationally. The measured emissivity profiles are found to be in agreement with those expected theoretically and it is also discovered that the measured emissivity profile can be used to determine the radial extent of the X-ray emitting corona above the accretion disc. The X-ray emitting coronae are located and their radial extents constrained in 1H 0707-495, IRAS 13224-3809 and MCG-6-30-15, while the insight gained into accretion disc emissivity profiles from ray tracing simulations allows the low flux state that 1H 0707-495 was seen to drop in to in January 2011 to be explained in terms of a collapse of the X-ray emitting corona to a confined region around the central black hole. The rapid variability of the X-ray emission from accreting black holes is exploited in the use of reverberation time lags, where variability in the continuum is seen to lead that in its reflection from the accretion disc, to measure the distances between the X-ray emitting corona and the reflector. Ray tracing calculations are developed to simulate lag spectra that can be measured in X-ray observations to provide a means of constraining the extent and geometry of the corona, complimentary to the use of the emissivity profiles. Combining these methods, the X-ray emitting coronae are constrained to extend radially outward a few tens of gravitational radii over the accretion disc, while extending vertically a few gravitational radii above the plane of the disc. Furthermore, it is demonstrated how measured lag spectra can be used to understand the propagation of luminosity fluctuations through the extent of the corona and techniques are developed for analysing energy-resolved variability analysis that will be possible with future generations of X-ray telescopes. Finally, these methods, along with theoretical insight gained form ray tracing simulations, are applied to X-ray spectra extracted from 1H 0707-495 during periods of low and high flux during the observations. Evidence is found for the expansion of the corona along with a drop in the average energy density as the X-ray luminosity increases followed by its contraction as the luminosity decreases on timescales of hours.
9

ChAInGeS: The CHANDRA Arp Interacting Galaxies Survey

Smith, Beverly J., Swartz, Douglas A., Miller, Olivia, Burleson, Jacob A., Nowak, Michael A., Struck, Curtis 01 June 2012 (has links)
We have conducted a statistical analysis of the ultra-luminous X-ray point sources (ULXs; L X ≥ 10 39 ergs -1) in a sample of galaxies selected from the Arp Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies. We find a possible enhancement of a factor of 2-4 in the number of ULXs per blue luminosity for the strongly interacting subset. Such an enhancement would be expected if ULX production is related to star formation, as interacting galaxies tend to have enhanced star formation rates on average. For most of the Arp galaxies in our sample, the total number of ULXs compared to the far-infrared luminosity is consistent with values found earlier for spiral galaxies. This suggests that for these galaxies, ULXs trace recent star formation. However, for the most infrared-luminous galaxies, we find a deficiency of ULXs compared to the infrared luminosity. For these very infrared-luminous galaxies, active galactic nuclei may contribute to powering the far-infrared; alternatively, ULXs may be highly obscured in the X-ray in these galaxies and therefore not detected by these Chandra observations. We determined local UV/optical colors within the galaxies in the vicinity of the candidate ULXs using Galaxy Evolution Explorer UV and Sloan Digitized Sky Survey optical images. In most cases, the distributions of colors are similar to the global colors of interacting galaxies. However, the u - g and r - i colors at the ULX locations tend to be bluer on average than these global colors, suggesting that ULXs are preferentially found in regions with young stellar populations. In the Arp sample there is a possible enhancement of a factor of 2-5 in the fraction of galactic nuclei that are X-ray-bright compared to more normal spirals.
10

Galaxy populations in distant, X-ray selected clusters of galaxies

Trudeau, Ariane 19 August 2022 (has links)
Galaxy clusters are the largest gravitationally bound structures in the Universe. Their masses are dominated by dark matter ($\sim$85\% of the mass) with stars representing 1-4\% of their masses. A hot, X-ray emitting gas called the intracluster medium makes most of their baryonic mass. The presence of this gas and of numerous neighbouring galaxies prematurely stop the star formation in clusters. In other terms, more galaxies in clusters are passive than in the general population of galaxies. This effect is mass and position-dependant: high-mass galaxies are more likely to be passive than less massive ones; galaxies inhabiting the cluster core are also less likely to form stars than those in the outskirts. The fraction of passive galaxies is greater in local clusters than in high-redshift ones, because they had more time to evolve. Much is unknown about the cessation of star formation, called quenching, in clusters. Thus, although many examples of infalling galaxies being stripped of their gas have been reported for low-mass galaxies, it is unclear if the most massive members became quenched before or after they become cluster members. The relationship between quenching and the cluster mass is also poorly understood. Despite the variety of methods devised to find clusters of galaxies, most of what we know about quenching in $z\gtrsim 1$ clusters was discovered with optically/infrared-selected cluster samples (clusters found as overdensities of galaxies), or samples of mixed origin. Yet, there is tentative evidence that optically/infrared-selected samples are biased toward having more passive galaxies than those that were X-ray selected. In the present dissertation, quenching is explored in X-ray selected cluster samples. A sample of high-redshift, low-mass galaxy clusters is built by finding galaxy overdensities coincident with sources of extended X-ray emission. A photometry-based analysis reveals that the fraction of quenched galaxies in these clusters is very variable. Moreover, the brightest cluster galaxies are also diverse. Yet, for all the information that photometry can provide, this sample candidate clusters need to be confirmed with spectroscopy. Spectroscopic observations obtained for four candidate clusters are reduced and analysed. The results show that three of them are clusters, the fourth candidate being a superposition of structures. Member spectra are examined to infer their star formation history, and the results shows the existence of an intermediary population of galaxies, where an old stellar population coexists with weak star formation. Finally, the galaxies of a $z=1.98$ X-ray selected cluster, XLSSC 122 are investigated in detail. Photometric data in 12 bands are organized to perform spectral energy distribution fittings, a technique that allows a simplified reconstitution of the history of the star formation. Results show that the members were formed at diverse epochs, the oldest being about 2.5 Gyrs old. Simulations drawn from the Multi Dark Planck 2 are used to infer the mass-scale of the cluster when the oldest galaxies were formed, something that has never been done before. The oldest galaxies were probably formed when XLSSC 122 had accreted $<$10\% of its $z=1.98$ mass, i.e. the mass-scale of a galaxy group. / Graduate

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