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“Do I have your attention…?”

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Presentation on theme: "“Do I have your attention…?”"— Presentation transcript:

1 “Do I have your attention…?”

2 Galaxies with Active Nuclei

3  “active galactic nuclei” (= AGN)
Active Galaxies Galaxies with extremely violent energy released in their nuclei (pl. of nucleus).  “active galactic nuclei” (= AGN) Up to many thousand times more luminous than the entire Milky Way; energy released within a region approx. the size of our solar system!

4 Line Spectra of Galaxies
Taking a spectrum of the light from a normal galaxy: The light from the galaxy should be mostly star light, and should thus contain many absorption lines from the individual stellar spectra.

5 Seyfert Galaxies Unusual spiral galaxies: Very bright cores
Unusual spiral galaxies: Very bright cores Emission line spectra Variability: ~ 50% in a few months Most likely power source: Accretion onto a supermassive black hole (~107 – 108 Msun) NGC 1566 Circinus Galaxy NGC 7742

6 Often: gas outflowing at high velocities, in opposite directions
Interacting Galaxies Seyfert galaxy NGC 7674 Seyfert galaxy 3C219 Active galaxies are often associated with interacting galaxies, possibly result of recent galaxy mergers. Often: gas outflowing at high velocities, in opposite directions

7 Cosmic Jets and Radio Lobes
Many active galaxies show powerful radio jets Hot spots: Energy in the jets is released in interaction with surrounding material Radio image of Cygnus A Material in the jets moves with almost the speed of light (“relativistic jets”).

8 Radio Galaxies Centaurus A (“Cen A” = NGC 5128): the closest AGN to us. Jet visible in radio and X-rays; show bright spots in similar locations. Infrared image reveals warm gas near the nucleus. Radio image superposed on optical image

9 Radio Galaxies (II) Visual + radio image of 3C31 Radio image of 3C75
Radio image of 3C75 Radio image of NGC 1265 Evidence for the galaxy moving through intergalactic material 3C75: Evidence for two nuclei  recent galaxy merger

10 Formation of Radio Jets
Jets are powered by accretion of matter onto a supermassive black hole. Black Hole Accretion Disk Twisted magnetic fields help to confine the material in the jet and to produce synchrotron radiation.

11 The Jets of M87 Jet: ~ 2.5 kpc long M87 = Central, giant elliptical galaxy in the Virgo cluster of galaxies Optical and radio observations detect a jet with velocities up to ~ 1/2 c.

12 The Dust Torus in NGC4261 Dust torus is directly visible with Hubble Space Telescope

13 Model for Seyfert Galaxies
Seyfert I: Strong, broad emission lines from rapidly moving gas clouds near the black hole Gas clouds Emission lines UV, X-rays Seyfert II: Weaker, narrow emission lines from more slowly moving gas clouds far from the black hole Supermassive black hole Accretion disk dense dust torus

14 Other Types of AGN and AGN Unification
Observing direction Cyg A (radio emission) Radio Galaxy: Powerful “radio lobes” at the end points of the jets, where power in the jets is dissipated.

15 Other Types of AGN and AGN Unification
Quasar or BL Lac object (properties very similar to quasars, but no emission lines) Emission from the jet pointing towards us is enhanced (“Doppler boosting”) compared to the jet moving in the other direction (“counter jet”). Observing direction

16 The Origin of Supermassive Black Holes
Most galaxies seem to harbor supermassive black holes in their centers. Fed and fueled by stars and gas from the near-central environment Galaxy interactions may enhance the flow of matter onto central black holes

17 Quasars Active nuclei in elliptical galaxies with even more powerful central sources than Seyfert galaxies. Also show strong variability over time scales of a few months. Also show very strong, broad emission lines in their spectra.

18 Spectral lines show a large redshift of
The Spectra of Quasars The Quasar 3C273 Spectral lines show a large redshift of z = Dl / l0 = 0.158

19 is only valid in the limit of low speed, vr << c
Quasar Red Shifts Quasars have been detected at the highest redshifts, up to z ~ 6 z = 0 z = 0.178 z = 0.240 z = Dl/l0 z = 0.302 Our old formula Dl/l0 = vr/c is only valid in the limit of low speed, vr << c z = 0.389

20 Studying Quasars The study of high-redshift quasars allows astronomers to investigate questions of 1) Large scale structure of the universe 2) Early history of the universe 3) Galaxy evolution 4) Dark matter Observing quasars at high redshifts  distances of several Gpc Look-back times of many billions of years  Universe was only a few billion years old!

21 Probing Dark Matter with High-z Quasars: Gravitational Lensing
Light from a distant quasar is bent around a foreground galaxy  two images of the same quasar! Light from a quasar behind a galaxy cluster is bent by the mass in the cluster. Use to probe the distribution of matter in the cluster.

22 Gravitational Lensing of Quasars
Gravitational Lensing of Quasars

23 Gallery of Quasar Host Galaxies
Elliptical galaxies; often merging / interacting galaxies

24 What evidence suggests that the energy source in a double-lobed radio galaxy lies at the center of the galaxy? Firstly, the geometry suggests that the lobes are inflated by gas jets emerging from the central galaxy. This is supported by the presence of synchrotron radiation which suggests magnetic fields that confine the emitted jets to narrow beams, and hot spots which suggest gas is being pushed into the surrounding gas causing the heating. Also, we know that matter falling onto a massive compact object (e.g., a black hole) can cause these jets.

25 2. How does the peculiar rotation of NGC5128 help explain the origin of this active galaxy?
There is a spherical cloud of stars orbiting about an axis which is perpendicular to the axis of rotation of the disk.  This strongly hints that this is the result of a merger.

26 3. What statistical evidence suggests that Seyfert galaxies have suffered recent interactions with other galaxies? They are three times more common in interacting pairs of galaxies than in isolated galaxies. 25% have shapes that suggest tidal interactions with other galaxies.

27 4. How does the unified model explain the two kinds of Seyfert galaxies?
It all depends on how the accretion disk is tipped WRT your line of sight. Tipped slightly  you are able to observe the hot, fast moving gas in the central galaxy, thus the x-rays and higher Doppler shifts produce the smeared, broad spectral lines. Not tipped at all  the disk blocks the radiation from the central galaxy. Plus, this gas is moving slower and explains the narrow spectral lines.

28 5. What observations are necessary to identify the presence of a supermassive black hole at the center of a galaxy? Observations of size and motion… the short time period it takes to fluctuate in brightness  small Motion of stars near the center allow for use of Kepler #3 and hence the mass. Thus Doppler shifts combined with other observations that allow for the distance to be calculated (e.g., Cepheids). Basically everything to allow for us to use Kepler #3.

29 6. How does the unified model implicate collisions and mergers in triggering active galaxies?
Tidal interactions with other galaxies not only can rip matter from a galaxy, but also can throw matter inward, toward the center of the galaxy. In this case, you would have a flood of matter falling into the black hole increasing the intensity of the bipolar flow.

30 7. Why were quasars first noticed as being peculiar?
How could quasars be so luminous that they emit 10 to 1000 times the energy of a galaxy, yet reside in a region only the size of our solar system?

31 8. How do the large redshifts of quasars lead astronomers to conclude they must be very distant?
, if z is large, then d must also be large.

32 9. What evidence suggests that quasars are ultraluminous but must be very small?
They are very distant, yet easily photographed  very luminous. The small time to fluctuate in brightness (a few days)  they must be smaller than a few light days in diameter.

33 10. How do gravitational lenses provide evidence that quasars are distant?
The spectra of quasars are similar, yet each are as unique as fingerprints. In 1979, the object was observed. It consists of two quasars separated by 6” of arc. These two objects share the exact same spectra, which implies that they are the same object! Yet the closer lensing galaxy is so far away that it is difficult to detect.

34 11. What evidence is there that quasars occur in distant galaxies?
Astronomers recorded the spectra of objects near quasars. Those objects share the same spectra of normal galaxies, and they have the same redshift as the quasar.

35 12. How can our model quasar explain the different radiation received from quasars?
The two kinds of radiation are a continuous spectrum and some emission lines. The continuous spectra fluctuates rapidly, which suggests that the object emitting it is small – probably a central black hole with an accretion disk. The emission lines don’t fluctuate rapidly, suggesting that they emanate form a larger region many light-years in diameter – probably clouds of gas excited from the synchrotron radiation from the central black hole. Also, as with AGNs, how the disk is tipped will affect what kind of quasar you’ll see.

36 13. What evidence is there that quasars must be triggered by collisions and mergers?
Galaxies were closer when the universe was young. They would have collided more often, and we know that interactions can cause matter to flow inward. Also, quasars are often located in distorted galaxies which suggests they interacted with other galaxies.

37 14. Why are there few quasars at low redshifts and at high redshifts but many at redshifts of about 2? A redshift of 2 corresponds to a time in the universe when galaxies were most actively forming, colliding, and merging.


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