A Multicolor CCD Survey for Quasars z > 3 Nikhil Revankar, Dr. Julia Kennefick, Shelly Bursick University of Arkansas, Arkansas Center for Space and Planetary.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Global Hands-On Universe meeting July 15, 2007 Authentic Data in the Classroom with the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Jordan Raddick (Johns Hopkins University)
Advertisements

Galaxies. The Hubble Tuning-Fork Diagram This is the traditional scheme for classifying galaxies:
Dwarf lenticular galaxies: structure and evolutionary census Sil’chenko Olga K. and Startseva Marina A. Sternberg Astronomical Institute, Moscow, Russia.
SALT Science – UW Madison. Properties of Quasar Host Galaxies Greg Mosby, Marsha Wolf, Christy Tremonti, and Eric Hooper Above: Left: A schematic showing.
Some examples of Type I supernova light curves Narrow range of absolute magnitude at maximum light indicates a good Standard Candle B band absolute magnitude.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 16 Galaxies and Dark Matter.
Stars and the HR Diagram Dr. Matt Penn National Solar Observatory
GTN The GLAST Telescope Network Involvement for students and teachers in the science of the GLAST mission Gordon G. Spear Sonoma State University March.
Growth of Structure Measurement from a Large Cluster Survey using Chandra and XMM-Newton John R. Peterson (Purdue), J. Garrett Jernigan (SSL, Berkeley),
Sloan Digital Sky Survey Astronomy April 2006 Margaret Flynn.
Class 25 : Active galactic nuclei Discovery of AGN (3C 273). What are AGN? Radio galaxies. AGN and colliding galaxies.
Do NOT open CLEA until all the black boxes have finished loading.
Galaxies and the Foundation of Modern Cosmology III.
Astro-DISC: Astronomy and cosmology applications of distributed super computing.
The Milky Way Center, Shape Globular cluster system
Quasars and Other Active Galaxies
Black holes: do they exist?
Chapter 21 power point Stars,galaxies, and the universe.
` Short-Term Variability in Quasar Magnitude Brian T. Fleming 1, Julia Kennefick 2, S. Bursick 2 1 Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, IL USA Sequential.
What We Know About Stars So Far
Radio Galaxies and Quasars Powerful natural radio transmitters associated with Giant elliptical galaxies Demo.
Objectives & Methodology: We aim to identify formerly unknown quasars from select databases, using previously known techniques that have been slightly.
Chapter 25 Galaxies and Dark Matter Dark Matter in the Universe We use the rotation speeds of galaxies to measure their mass:
Lecture Outlines Astronomy Today 8th Edition Chaisson/McMillan © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 25.
Astronomical Spectroscopy. Astronomical spectroscopy is done by attaching a spectrometer to a telescope A spectrometer is a device separates the individual.
Supermassive Black Holes at the Centers of Galaxies Singles and Pairs using X-rays to study black holes disruption of stars by massive black holes pairs.
January 2nd 2013 Objective Warm-Up
Spin, jet-feedback and black-hole growth Steve Rawlings & Tom Mauch Sub-Department.
Class 4 : Basic properties of stars
CELT Science Case. CELT Science Justification Process Put together a Science Working Group –Bolte, Chuck Steidel, Andrea Ghez, Mike Brown, Judy Cohen,
A multiwavelength approach is needed to discover a quasars’ behaviour as a whole and uncover its structure. This means obtaining data from the long wavelength.
© 2005 Pearson Prentice Hall This work is protected by United States copyright laws and is provided solely for the use of instructors in teaching their.
Possibility of detecting CHRISTODOULOU MEMORY of GRAVITATIONAL WAVES by using LISA (Laser Interferometer Space Antenna) Thus, the final form of the memory.
吴学兵 (北京大学天文学系) 大样本巡天中类星体测光红移的确定 吴学兵 (北京大学天文学系)
Quasars, Galaxies, and Stars…Oh my! Quasars, Galaxies, and Stars…Oh my!! Sarah Turner, Mary Flynn, Andrea Hayden OVERVIEW BACKGROUND Astronomy spectra.
Black Holes in Other Galaxies. The giant elliptical galaxy M87 is located 50 million light-years away in the constellation Virgo. By measuring the rotational.
August 10, 2004 Apache Point Observatory, NM FINDING SUPERNOVAE IN A SLICE OF PI Dennis J. Lamenti San Francisco State University.
Stellar Continua How do we measure stellar continua?
Galaxies with Active Nuclei Chapter 14:. Active Galaxies Galaxies with extremely violent energy release in their nuclei (pl. of nucleus).  “active galactic.
Quasars and Active Galactic Nuclei
Active Galaxies and Supermassive Black Holes Chapter 17.
Kevin Cooke.  Galaxy Characteristics and Importance  Sloan Digital Sky Survey: What is it?  IRAF: Uses and advantages/disadvantages ◦ Fits files? 
Quasars and Other Active Galaxies
Looking for a Color-Luminosity Relationship for AGN July 16, 2012 prepared by Varoujan Gorjian NITARP Scientist.
The Photometric Properties of NGC 6134 and Hogg 19 SDSS u’g’r’i’z’ Open Cluster Survey: Credit: Credit: SMARTS consortium.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 16 Galaxies and Dark Matter Lecture Outline.
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Galaxies. © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Hubble Deep Field Our deepest images of the universe show a great variety of galaxies,
The Formation and Evolution of Galaxies Michael Balogh University of Waterloo.
A black hole: The ultimate space-time warp Ch. 5.4 A black hole is an accumulation of mass so dense that nothing can escape its gravitational force, not.
The Planck Mission: Looking into the Past to Learn about Our Future Courtney Nickle, Stephanie Clark and Taylor Phillips Astronomy, Spring 2011 Abstract.
Competitive Science with the WHT for Nearby Unresolved Galaxies Reynier Peletier Kapteyn Astronomical Institute Groningen.
Chapter 25 Galaxies and Dark Matter. 25.1Dark Matter in the Universe 25.2Galaxy Collisions 25.3Galaxy Formation and Evolution 25.4Black Holes in Galaxies.
Stars Goal: Compare star color to star temperature.
Active Galaxies Galaxies with extremely violent energy release in their nuclei (pl. of nucleus). → “Active Galactic Nuclei” (= AGN) Up to many thousand.
Galaxies. The Hubble Tuning-Fork Diagram This is the traditional scheme for classifying galaxies:
Chapter 20 Cosmology. Hubble Ultra Deep Field Galaxies and Cosmology A galaxy’s age, its distance, and the age of the universe are all closely related.
Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) is a NASA infrared- wavelength astronomical space telescope launched on December 14, 2009 It’s an Earth-orbiting.
Color Magnitude Diagram VG. So we want a color magnitude diagram for AGN so that by looking at the color of an AGN we can get its luminosity –But AGN.
Announcements Grades for third exam are now available on WebCT
Evolution of Black Hole Masses from Spectra of Quasar Gas Dynamics
Mapping the Universe With radio galaxies and quasars.
Quasars, Active Galaxies, and super-massive black holes
Time Variability Selection of Quasars in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
Quasars.
Gyrochronology: Aging Nearby, Debris Disk Candidate Stars
Galaxies With Active Nuclei
Galaxies With Active Nuclei
Lecture 36 – Quasars and Radio Galaxies
Milky Way and other Galaxies
Presentation transcript:

A Multicolor CCD Survey for Quasars z > 3 Nikhil Revankar, Dr. Julia Kennefick, Shelly Bursick University of Arkansas, Arkansas Center for Space and Planetary Sciences Cornell University, Department of Mathematics What are quasars and why should we study them? Selection of Quasars and the SDSS How does a multicolor survey work?Current Results Future Work Acknowledgements Figure 1: This illustration shows the accretion disk around a supermassive black hole. The powerful radiation we observe from quasars comes from matter and gas swirling around and falling into the black hole.  Quasars are small, high energy active cores of very distant galaxies.  Look like stars in the visible, but have higher energy outputs and are also highly red-shifted.  Their energy output comes from gigantic accretion disks surrounding supermassive black holes.  Since quasars have high red-shifts, studying them enables us to see the universe when it was young.  Studying their spectra allows us to probe the amount and nature of intervening material at high red-shifts. Figure 2: This illustration shows the coverage area of the SDSS. It will cover approximately RA: 8h to 17h and dec: -10° to 80°. My objective is to select three objects, classified by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) as quasars, and to confirm their classification via multicolor techniques. The three quasars I selected had red-shifts z=3.01, z=3.19, and z= These quasars represent a look-back time of ~11.5 billion years to ~12.1 billion years. The quasars had to be magnitude 18 or brighter due to telescope limitations. About the SDSS: An ongoing survey that is trying to map a quarter of the entire sky. The survey will try to record the distance to 100,000 quasars. The SDSS had images and spectra for each of my quasars. I had to use the images from SDSS to detect the quasars in my own data. Figure 3: Top- Filter curves for B, V, and R filter. The chart shows the efficiency of the various filters at different wavelengths. Middle- Spectrum of a star. Bottom- Spectrum of a quasar.  The NFO Webscope telescope, which is the telescope that was used for this project, has three filters (B,V,R). This gives us two usable colors, namely B-V and V-R.  By looking at the images above, we see that stars and quasars have very different spectrums in the wavelengths that the filters cover.  When we look at the two colors B-V and V-R we are essentially looking at two ratios: F b /F v and F v /F r. These ratios represent the flux (number of photons per unit area per unit time) in the various filters. The two ratios are sufficiently different in stars and quasars, so that when we plot B-V versus V-R, the quasars stand apart from the stellar locus.  For my project, I used apparent magnitudes so that B-V=M b -M v and V-R=M v -M r, is just the difference in apparent magnitudes in the various filters. These differences are once again dissimilar enough in stars and quasars so that pinpointing quasars in our plot is not difficult. o Continue collecting data on z= quasar in order to have a better defined stellar locus and separation. I also intend to use the same procedure used above for the z=3.01 and z=3.19 quasar. o I have also started collecting data on a region of the sky that is not covered by the SDSS. The coordinates of this region lie around RA: 19h and dec: +58 °. My hope is to identify possible quasar candidates by obtaining a well defined stellar locus, so that outliers can be pinpointed. Figure 4: Image of z= quasar with a B-filter. I stacked together 9 images to obtain the final image. Figure 5: Same quasar, except this image is taken with a V-filter. The final image was obtained by stacking 10 images. Figure 6: Image of the same quasar with a R-filter. This image was produced by combining 5 images. Figure 7: I performed photometry on the above images to obtain the apparent magnitudes in the three filters. Next, I plotted the two colors, and the quasar stood apart from the general stellar locus, as expected. Funding for the creation and distribution of the SDSS Archive has been provided by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, the Participating Institutions, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the National Science Foundation, the U.S. Department of Energy, the Japanese Monbukagakusho, and the Max Planck Society. The SDSS Web site is I would also like to thank Brian for assisting me with my software questions, and a special thanks to Alison for helping me with the creation of various charts.