• Title/Summary/Keyword: active galactic nuclei

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BRACKETT LINE-BASED MBH ESTIMATORS AND HOT DUST TEMPERATURES OF TYPE 1 AGNs FROM AKARI SPECTROSCOPIC DATA

  • KIM, DOHYEONG;IM, MYUNGSHIN
    • Publications of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.30 no.2
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    • pp.443-445
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    • 2015
  • We provide results of near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopic observations of 83 nearby (0.002< z <0.48) and bright (K <14 mag) type 1 active galactic nuclei (AGNs). For the observations, we used the Infrared Camera (IRC) on AKARI allowing us to obtain the spectrum in the rarely studied spectral range of $2.5-5.0{\mu}m$. The $2.5-5.0{\mu}m$ spectral region suffers less dust extinction than ultra violet (UV) or optical wavelength ranges, and contains several important emission lines such as $Br{\beta}$ ($2.63{\mu}m$), $Br{\alpha}$ ($4.05{\mu}m$), and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH; $3.3{\mu}m$). The sample is selected from the bright quasar surveys of Palomar Green and SNUQSO, and AGNs with black hole (BH) masses estimated from reverberation mapping method. We measure the Brackett line properties for 11 AGNs, which enable us to derive BH mass estimators and investigate circum-nuclear environments. Moreover, we perform spectral modeling to fit the hot and warm dust components by adding photometric data from SDSS, 2MASS, WISE, and ISO to the AKARI spectra, and estimate hot and warm dust temperatures of ~1100K and ~220 K, respectively.

Diagnostics of Diffuse Two-Phase Matter Using Techniques of Positron Annihilation Spectroscopy in Gamma-Ray and Optical Spectra

  • Doikov, Dmytry;Yushchenko, Alexander;Jeong, Yeuncheol
    • Journal of Astronomy and Space Sciences
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    • v.36 no.3
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    • pp.115-119
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    • 2019
  • This paper is a part of the series on positron annihilation spectroscopy of two-phase diffuse gas-and-dust aggregates, such as interstellar medium and the young remnants of type II supernovae. The results obtained from prior studies were applied here to detect the relationship between the processes of the annihilation of the K-shell electrons and incident positrons, and the effects of these processes on the optical spectra of their respective atoms. Particular attention was paid to the Doppler broadening of their optical lines. The relationship between the atomic mass of the elements and the Doppler broadening, ${\Delta}{\lambda}_D$ (${\AA}$), of their emission lines as produced in these processes was established. This relationship is also illustrated for isotope sets of light elements, namely $^3_2He$, $^6_3Li$, $^7_3Be$, $^{10}_5B$ and $^{11}_5B$. A direct correlation between the ${\gamma}-line$ luminosity ( $E_{\gamma}=1.022MeV$) and ${\Delta}{\lambda}_D$ (${\AA}$) was proved virtually. Qualitative estimates of the structure of such lines depending on the positron velocity distribution function, f(E), were made. The results are presented in tabular form and can be used to set up the objectives of further studies on active galactic nuclei and young remnants of type II supernovae.

AGN BROAD LINE REGIONS SCALE WITH BOLOMETRIC LUMINOSITY

  • TRIPPE, SASCHA
    • Journal of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.48 no.3
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    • pp.203-206
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    • 2015
  • The masses of supermassive black holes in active galactic nuclei (AGN) can be derived spectroscopically via virial mass estimators based on selected broad optical/ultraviolet emission lines. These estimates commonly use the line width as a proxy for the gas speed and the monochromatic continuum luminosity, λLλ, as a proxy for the radius of the broad line region. However, if the size of the broad line region scales with the bolometric AGN luminosity rather than λLλ, mass estimates based on different emission lines will show a systematic discrepancy which is a function of the color of the AGN continuum. This has actually been observed in mass estimates based on Hα/Hβ and CIV lines, indicating that AGN broad line regions indeed scale with bolometric luminosity. Given that this effect seems to have been overlooked as yet, currently used single-epoch mass estimates are likely to be biased.

HOW TO MONITOR AGN INTRA-DAY VARIABILITY AT 230GHZ

  • Kim, Jae-Young;Trippe, Sascha
    • Journal of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.46 no.2
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    • pp.65-74
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    • 2013
  • We probe the feasibility of high-frequency radio observations of very rapid flux variations in compact active galactic nuclei (AGN). Our study assumes observations at 230GHz with a small 6-meter class observatory, using the SNU Radio Astronomical Observatory (SRAO) as an example. We find that 33 radio-bright sources are observable with signal-to-noise ratios larger than ten. We derive statistical detection limits via exhaustive Monte Carlo simulations assuming (a) periodic, and (b) episodic flaring flux variations on time-scales as small as tens of minutes. We conclude that a wide range of flux variations is observable. This makes high-frequency radio observations-even with small observatories-a powerful probe of AGN intra-day variability; especially, those which complement observations at lower radio frequencies with larger observatories like the Korean VLBI Network (KVN).

Current status of VLBI test observations for the Korean VLBI Network at 22/43GHz

  • Lee, Sang-Sung;Oh, Chung-Sik;Sohn, Bong-Won;Byun, Do-Young;Cho, Jae-Sang;Oh, Jung-Hwan;Jung, Tae-Hyun;Kim, Kee-Tae;Miyazaki, Atsushi;Sawada-Satoh, Satoko;Kobayashi, Hideyuki
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.35 no.2
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    • pp.59.1-59.1
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    • 2010
  • We have carried out VLBI test observations of the Korean VLBI Network (KVN) at 22/43-GHz in collaboration with Japanese VLBI Exploration of Radio Astrometry (VERA). In order to evaluate the VLBI system of KVN, we have observed several sources using KVN+VERA. They consist of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGNs), which are expected to be compact and to have very well-known structures at spatial resolutions of 50-250 Mega-wavelengths, and Galactic star-forming regions and late-type stars, which have bright H2O and SiO maser emission regions. We have investigated baseline and imaging sensitivities of KVN+VERA. In this talk we report the preliminary results.

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우주측지 VLBI 시스템 구축

  • Kim, Du-Hwan;Kondo, Tetsuro;O, Hong-Jong;Lee, Sang-O;Lee, Jin-U;Bae, Min-Su;Kim, Min-Seok;Lee, Yong-Gu;Kim, Seong-Jin;Kim, Myeong-Ho;Kim, Su-Cheol;Park, Jin-Sik;Ju, Hyeon-Hui
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.35 no.2
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    • pp.59.2-59.2
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    • 2010
  • We have carried out VLBI test observations of the Korean VLBI Network (KVN) at 22/43-GHz in collaboration with Japanese VLBI Exploration of Radio Astrometry (VERA). In order to evaluate the VLBI system of KVN, we have observed several sources using KVN+VERA. They consist of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGNs), which are expected to be compact and to have very well-known structures at spatial resolutions of 50-250 Mega-wavelengths, and Galactic star-forming regions and late-type stars, which have bright H2O and SiO maser emission regions. We have investigated baseline and imaging sensitivities of KVN+VERA. In this talk we report the preliminary results.

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MOGABA: Monitoring of Gamma-ray Bright AGN with KVN 21-m radio telescopes at 22, 43 and 86GHz

  • Lee, Sang-Sung;Byun, Do-Young;Baek, Junhyu;Han, Myounghee;Yang, Jihae;Sohn, Bong Won
    • The Bulletin of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.37 no.2
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    • pp.239.2-239.2
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    • 2012
  • We report preliminary results of MOGABA project for monitoring total flux density, linearly polarized flux, and polarization angle at 22, 43 and 86GHz of Gamma-ray bright AGN (Active Galactic Nuclei) with KVN (Korean VLBI Network) 21-m radio telescopes. The project has been conducted in one year since May 2011 with an effective monitoring cycle of 1 week, observing four main objects (3C 454.3, BL Lac, 3C 273, and 3C 279). More objects were included in the source list when they had flared in Gamma-ray. Especially, we included a compact radio source at the Galactic center, SgrA* since Jan. 2012. In this paper, we report the current status of the project and preliminary results for the monitoring observations.

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A RELATION BETWEEN ACTIVE BLACK HOLES AND STAR FORMATION OF LOCAL ACTIVE GALAXIES

  • MATSUOKA, KENTA;WOO, JONG-HAK;BAE, HYUN-JIN
    • Publications of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.30 no.2
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    • pp.341-343
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    • 2015
  • We present an analysis of the relation between star-formation (SF) and accretion luminosities of local type-2 active galactic nuclei (AGNs) at $0.01{\leq}z<0.22$. We match type-2 AGNs found in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey to current far-infrared (FIR) survey catalogues based on AKARI and Herschel. Estimating AGN luminosities from [$O{\small{III}}$]${\lambda}5007$ and [$O{\small{I}}$]${\lambda}6300$ emission lines, we find a positive linear trend between FIR and AGN luminosities over a wide dynamical range. This result appears to be inconsistent with recent reports that low-luminosity AGNs show no correlation between FIR and X-ray luminosities; this contradiction is likely due to Malmquist and sample selection biases. Moreover, we also find that pure-AGN candidates, for which the FIR radiation is thought to be AGN-dominated, show significant low-SF activities. These AGNs hosted by low-SF galaxies are rare in our sample. However, it is possible that the low fraction of low-SF AGN is caused by observational limitations, as recent FIR surveys are not sufficient to examine the population of high-luminosity AGNs hosted by low-SF galaxies.

INTRA-NIGHT OPTICAL VARIABILITY OF ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI IN THE COSMOS FIELD WITH THE KMTNET

  • Kim, Joonho;Karouzos, Marios;Im, Myungshin;Choi, Changsu;Kim, Dohyeong;Jun, Hyunsung D.;Lee, Joon Hyeop;Mezcua, Mar
    • Journal of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.51 no.4
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    • pp.89-110
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    • 2018
  • Active Galactic Nucleus (AGN) variability can be used to study the physics of the region in the vicinity of the central black hole. In this paper, we investigated intra-night optical variability of AGN in the COSMOS field in order to understand the AGN instability at the smallest scale. Observations were performed using the KMTNet on three separate nights for 2.5 to 5 hours at a cadence of 20 to 30 min. We find that the observation enables the detection of short-term variability as small as ~ 0.02 and 0.1 mag for R ~ 18 and 20 mag sources, respectively. Using four selection methods (X-rays, mid-infrared, radio, and matching with SDSS quasars), 394 AGN are detected in the $4deg^2$ field of view. After differential photometry and ${\chi}^2$-test, we classify intra-night variable AGN. The fraction of variable AGN (0-8%) is statistically consistent with a null result. Eight out of 394 AGN are found to be intra-night variable in two filters or two nights with a variability level of 0.1 mag, suggesting that they are strong candidates for intra-night variable AGN. Still they represent a small population (2%). There is no sub-category of AGN that shows a statistically significant intra-night variability.

DOES THE JET PRODUCTION EFFICIENCY OF RADIO GALAXIES CONTROL THEIR OPTICAL AGN TYPES?

  • Trippe, Sascha
    • Journal of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.47 no.4
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    • pp.159-161
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    • 2014
  • The jet production efficiency of radio galaxies can be quantified by comparison of their kinetic jet powers $P_{jet}$ and Bondi accretion powers $P_B$. These two parameters are known to be related linearly, with the jet power resulting from the Bondi power by multiplication with an efficiency factor of order 1%. Using a recently published (Nemmen & Tchekhovskoy 2014) high-quality sample of 27 radio galaxies, I construct a $P_B$ - $P_{jet}$ diagram that includes information on optical AGN types as far as available. This diagram indicates that the jet production efficiency is a function of AGN type: Seyfert 2 galaxies seem to be systematically (with a false alarm probability of $4.3{\times}10^{-4}$) less efficient, by about one order of magnitude, in powering jets than Seyfert 1 galaxies, LINERs, or the remaining radio galaxies. This suggests an evolutionary sequence from Sy 2s to Sy 1s and LINERs, controlled by an interplay of jets on the one hand and dust and gas in galactic nuclei on the other hand. When taking this effect into account, the $P_B$ - $P_{jet}$ relation is probably much tighter intrinsically than currently assumed.