A broad-band X-ray view of the warm absorber in radio-quiet quasar MR2251-178

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 414:4 (2011) 3307-3321

Authors:

J Gofford, JN Reeves, TJ Turner, F Tombesi, V Braito, D Porquet, L Miller, SB Kraemer, Y Fukazawa

Abstract:

We present the analysis of a new broad-band X-ray spectrum (0.6-180.0keV) of the radio-quiet quasar MR2251-178 which uses both Suzaku and Swift/Burst Alert Telescope data. In accordance with previous observations, we find that the general continuum can be well described by a power law with Γ= 1.6 and an apparent soft excess below 1keV. Warm absorption is clearly present, and absorption lines due to the Feunresolved transition array, FeL (Fexxiii-xxiv), Sxv and Sxvi are detected below 3keV. At higher energies, FeK absorption from Fexxv-xxvi is detected and a relatively weak (EW = 25+12-8eV) narrow FeKα emission line is observed (E= 6.44 ± 0.04keV) which is well modelled by the presence of a mildly ionized (ξ≲ 30) reflection component with a low reflection fraction (R < 0.2). At least five ionized absorption components with 1020≲NH≲ 1023 cm-2 and 0 ≲ logξ/ergcms-1≲ 4 are required to achieve an adequate spectral fit. Alternatively, we show that the continuum can also be fit if a Γ∼ 2.0 power law is absorbed by a column of NH∼ 1023cm-2 which covers ∼30 per cent of the source flux. Independent of which continuum model is adopted, the FeL and Fexxv Heα lines are well fit by a single absorber outflowing with vout∼ 0.14c. Such an outflow/disc-wind is likely to be substantially clumped (b∼ 10-3) in order to not vastly exceed the likely accretion rate of the source. © 2011 The Authors Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2011 RAS.

Contemporaneous Chandra HETG and Suzaku X-ray observations of NGC 4051

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 414:3 (2011) 1965-1986

Authors:

AP Lobban, JN Reeves, L Miller, TJ Turner, V Braito, SB Kraemer, DM Crenshaw

Abstract:

We present the results of a deep 300ks Chandra High Energy Transmission Grating (HETG) observation of the highly variable narrow-line Seyfert Type 1 galaxy NGC 4051. The HETG spectrum reveals 28 significant soft X-ray ionized lines in either emission or absorption; primarily originating from H-like and He-like K-shell transitions of O, Ne, Mg and Si (including higher order lines and strong forbidden emission lines from Ovii and Neix) plus high-ionization L-shell transitions from Fexvii to Fexxii and lower ionization inner-shell lines (e.g. Ovi). Modelling the data with xstar requires four distinct ionization zones for the gas, all outflowing with velocities <1000kms-1. A selection of the strongest emission/absorption lines appear to be resolved with full width at half-maximum (FWHM) of ~600kms-1. We also present the results from a quasi-simultaneous 350ks Suzaku observation of NGC 4051 where the X-ray Imaging Spectrometer (XIS) spectrum reveals strong evidence for blueshifted absorption lines at ~6.8 and ~7.1keV, consistent with previous findings. Modelling with xstar suggests that this is the signature of a highly ionized, high-velocity outflow (logξ= 4.1+0.2-0.1; vout~-0.02c) which potentially may have a significant effect on the host galaxy environment via feedback. Finally, we also simultaneously model the broad-band 2008 XIS+HXD (Hard X-ray Detector) Suzaku data with archival Suzaku data from 2005 when the source was observed to have entered an extended period of low flux in an attempt to analyse the cause of the long-term spectral variability. We find that we can account for this by allowing for large variations in the normalization of the intrinsic power-law component which may be interpreted as being due to significant changes in the covering fraction of a Compton-thick partial-coverer obscuring the central continuum emission. © 2011 The Authors Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2011 RAS.

Design concepts for the Cherenkov Telescope Array CTA: An advanced facility for ground-based high-energy gamma-ray astronomy

Experimental Astronomy 32:3 (2011) 193-316

Authors:

M Actis, G Agnetta, F Aharonian, A Akhperjanian, J Aleksić, E Aliu, D Allan, I Allekotte, F Antico, LA Antonelli, P Antoranz, A Aravantinos, T Arlen, H Arnaldi, S Artmann, K Asano, H Asorey, J Bähr, A Bais, C Baixeras, S Bajtlik, D Balis, A Bamba, C Barbier, M Barceló, A Barnacka, J Barnstedt, UB de Almeida, JA Barrio, S Basso, D Bastieri, C Bauer, J Becerra, Y Becherini, K Bechtol, J Becker, V Beckmann, W Bednarek, B Behera, M Beilicke, M Belluso, M Benallou, W Benbow, J Berdugo, K Berger, T Bernardino, K Bernlöhr, A Biland, S Billotta, T Bird, E Birsin, E Bissaldi, S Blake, O Blanch, AA Bobkov, L Bogacz, M Bogdan, C Boisson, J Boix, J Bolmont, G Bonanno, A Bonardi, T Bonev, J Borkowski, O Botner, A Bottani, M Bourgeat, C Boutonnet, A Bouvier, S Brau-Nogué, I Braun, T Bretz, MS Briggs, P Brun, L Brunetti, JH Buckley, V Bugaev, R Bühler, T Bulik, G Busetto, S Buson, K Byrum, M Cailles, R Cameron, R Canestrari, S Cantu, E Carmona, A Carosi, J Carr, PH Carton, M Casiraghi, H Castarede, O Catalano, S Cavazzani, S Cazaux, B Cerruti, M Cerruti, PM Chadwick, J Chiang, M Chikawa

Abstract:

Ground-based gamma-ray astronomy has had a major breakthrough with the impressive results obtained using systems of imaging atmospheric Cherenkov telescopes. Ground-based gamma-ray astronomy has a huge potential in astrophysics, particle physics and cosmology. CTA is an international initiative to build the next generation instrument, with a factor of 5-10 improvement in sensitivity in the 100 GeV-10 TeV range and the extension to energies well below 100 GeV and above 100 TeV. CTA will consist of two arrays (one in the north, one in the south) for full sky coverage and will be operated as open observatory. The design of CTA is based on currently available technology. This document reports on the status and presents the major design concepts of CTA. © 2011 The Author(s).

Galaxy Zoo Supernovae

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 412:2 (2011) 1309-1319

Authors:

AM Smith, S Lynn, M Sullivan, CJ Lintott, PE Nugent, J Botyanszki, M Kasliwal, R Quimby, SP Bamford, LF Fortson, K Schawinski, I Hook, S Blake, P Podsiadlowski, J Jönsson, A Gal-Yam, I Arcavi, DA Howell, JS Bloom, J Jacobsen, SR Kulkarni, NM Law, EO Ofek, R Walters

Abstract:

This paper presents the first results from a new citizen science project: Galaxy Zoo Supernovae. This proof-of-concept project uses members of the public to identify supernova candidates from the latest generation of wide-field imaging transient surveys. We describe the Galaxy Zoo Supernovae operations and scoring model, and demonstrate the effectiveness of this novel method using imaging data and transients from the Palomar Transient Factory (PTF). We examine the results collected over the period 2010 April-July, during which nearly 14000 supernova candidates from the PTF were classified by more than 2500 individuals within a few hours of data collection. We compare the transients selected by the citizen scientists to those identified by experienced PTF scanners and find the agreement to be remarkable - Galaxy Zoo Supernovae performs comparably to the PTF scanners and identified as transients 93 per cent of the ∼130 spectroscopically confirmed supernovae (SNe) that the PTF located during the trial period (with no false positive identifications). Further analysis shows that only a small fraction of the lowest signal-to-noise ratio detections (r > 19.5) are given low scores: Galaxy Zoo Supernovae correctly identifies all SNe with ≥8σ detections in the PTF imaging data. The Galaxy Zoo Supernovae project has direct applicability to future transient searches, such as the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope, by both rapidly identifying candidate transient events and via the training and improvement of existing machine classifier algorithms. © 2011 The Authors Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2011 RAS.

Galaxy Zoo: Bar lengths in local disc galaxies

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 415:4 (2011) 3627-3640

Authors:

B Hoyle, KL Masters, RC Nichol, EM Edmondson, AM Smith, C Lintott, R Scranton, S Bamford, K Schawinski, D Thomas

Abstract:

We present an analysis of bar length measurements of 3150 local galaxies in a volume-limited sample of low-redshift (z < 0.06) disc galaxies. Barred galaxies were initially selected from the Galaxy Zoo 2 project, and the lengths and widths of the bars were manually drawn by members of the Galaxy Zoo community using a Google Maps interface. Bars were measured independently by different observers, multiple times per galaxy (≥3), and we find that observers were able to reproduce their own bar lengths to 3 per cent and each others' to better than 20 per cent. We find a colour bimodality in our disc galaxy population with bar length, i.e. longer bars inhabit redder disc galaxies and the bars themselves are redder, and that the bluest galaxies host the smallest galactic bars (<5h-1kpc). We also find that bar and disc colours are clearly correlated, and for galaxies with small bars, the disc is, on average, redder than the bar colours, while for longer bars the bar then itself is redder, on average, than the disc. We further find that galaxies with a prominent bulge are more likely to host longer bars than those without bulges. We categorize our galaxy populations by how the bar and/or ring are connected to the spiral arms. We find that galaxies whose bars are directly connected to the spiral arms are preferentially bluer and that these galaxies host typically shorter bars. Within the scatter, we find that stronger bars are found in galaxies which host a ring (and only a ring). The bar length and width measurements used herein are made publicly available for others to use. © 2011 The Authors Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2011 RAS.