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Black Hole

Lensing of space time around a black hole. At Oxford we study black holes observationally and theoretically on all size and time scales - it is some of our core work.

Credit: ALAIN RIAZUELO, IAP/UPMC/CNRS. CLICK HERE TO VIEW MORE IMAGES.

Dr Aprajita Verma

Senior Research Fellow

Research theme

  • Astronomy and astrophysics

Sub department

  • Astrophysics

Research groups

  • Zooniverse
  • Astronomical instrumentation
  • Galaxy formation and evolution
  • Rubin-LSST
  • Extremely Large Telescope
aprajita.verma@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)73374
Denys Wilkinson Building, room 760
  • About
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  • Publications

HST imaging of hyperluminous infrared galaxies

arXiv (2001)

Authors:

D Farrah, Aprajita Verma, S Oliver, M Rowan-Robinson, R McMahon

Abstract:

We present HST WFPC2 I band imaging for a sample of 9 Hyperluminous Infrared Galaxies spanning a redshift range 0.45 < z < 1.34. Three of the sample have morphologies showing evidence for interactions, six are QSOs. Host galaxies in the QSOs are reliably detected out to z ~ 0.8. The detected QSO host galaxies have an elliptical morphology with scalelengths spanning 6.5 < r_{e}(Kpc) < 88 and absolute k corrected magnitudes spanning -24.5 < M_{I} < -25.2. There is no clear correlation between the IR power source and the optical morphology. None of the sources in the sample, including F15307+3252, show any evidence for gravitational lensing. We infer that the IR luminosities are thus real. Based on these results, and previous studies of HLIRGs, we conclude that this class of object is broadly consistent with being a simple extrapolation of the ULIRG population to higher luminosities; ULIRGs being mainly violently interacting systems powered by starbursts and/or AGN. Only a small number of sources whose infrared luminosities exceed 10^{13}Lsun are intrinsically less luminous objects which have been boosted by gravitational lensing.
More details from the publisher
Details from ORA
Details from ArXiV

HST imaging of hyperluminous infrared galaxies

(2001)

Authors:

D Farrah, A Verma, S Oliver, M Rowan-Robinson, R McMahon
More details from the publisher

Deep optical and near infrared observations in ELAIS areas

European Space Agency, (Special Publication) ESA SP (2001) 421-424

Authors:

EA González-Solares, I Pérez-Fournon, R McMahon, C Sabbey, O Almaini, J Manners, C Willott, F Cabrera-Guerra, P Ciliegi, A Lawrence, B Mann, S Oliver, M Rowan-Robinson, S Serjeant, A Verma

Abstract:

We present deep optical and near infrared imaging over half square degree of sky in the centres of the ELAIS regions N1 and N2 and coincident with deep XMM/Chandra observations. The data have been obtained with the Wide Field Camera (WFC) and the Cambridge InfraRed Survey Instrument (CIRSI) both at the Isaac Newton Telescope (Observatorio del Roque de los Muchachos, Canary Islands). Limiting magnitudes achieved are g'=26.7, r'=26.2, i'=25.0 and H=20.2 (3σ). These data have been used to identify the faint optical counterparts of the Infrared Space Observatory (ISO), radio and X-ray sources in these areas.

MID-FIR properties of ELAIS sources

European Space Agency, (Special Publication) ESA SP (2001) 147-150

Authors:

I Márquez, J Masegosa, T Morel, A Efstathiou, A Verma, P Vaisanen, D Alexander, P Héraudeau, C Surace, I Pérez-Fournón, F Cabrera-Guerra, JI González-Serrano, EA González-Solares, S Serjeant, S Oliver, M Rowan-Robinson

Abstract:

We present the properties of all the galaxies detected by ISO at 7, 15 and 90μm in ELAIS northern fields. The spectral energy distribution (SED) of those 20 galaxies with IRAS detections can generally be well fitted by a predominant cirrus component plus a modest starburst contribution. Follow-up spectroscopy has shown that all the objects are emission-line galaxies but without a very intense star formation event. Most of the galaxies analyzed by means of optical R band photometry result to host an important exponential disk component, in good agreement with the SED IR modelling. We note that galaxies with morphological signs of perturbations seem to show slightly higher f15/f6.7 ratios, indicating that star formation could be more important in them. One of the objects is a broad-line, radio-quiet quasar at z=1.099; its spectral energy distribution indicates that it is a hyperluminous infrared galaxy (HLIG), the first HLIG detected in the ELAIS areas.

Spectroscopic properties of new IR galaxies detected in the european large area ISO survey

European Space Agency, (Special Publication) ESA SP (2001) 369-372

Authors:

F Cabrera-Guerra, I Pérez-Fournon, EA González-Solares, D Fadda, I González-Serrano, M Rowan-Robinson, S Serjeant, A Verma, D Farrah, A Efstathiou, T Morel, C Surace, S Oliver, P Ciliegi, F Pozzi, C Lari, R McMahon, C Willott, B Vila-Vilaró, I Mature, F LaFranca, P Héraudeau, J Masegosa, I Márquez, C Gruppioni, A Franceschini, H Flores

Abstract:

We present preliminary results of multi-object spectroscopy of new mid-, and far-infrared selected galaxies detected in the European Large Area ISO Survey (ELAIS). The data have been obtained with the fibre spectrographs WYFFOS at the William Herschel Telescope (Observatorio del Roque de los Muchachos, ORM, Canary Islands) and Hydra at the WIYN Telescope (Kitt Peak Observatory, Arizona). The sample includes ISO sources detected at 7, 15 and 90 μm and radio sources from our deep VLA survey in the ELAIS areas.

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