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Active Galactic Nuclei (F. Miniati HIT J12.2) • Seyfert Galaxies • Quasars i) Radio Galaxies ii) QSOs iii)Blazars Active Galactic Nuclei AGNs are classified in many different ways but the two “main” classes: • Seyfert Galaxies: • Quasars: LAGN ∼ LGalaxy LAGN ≥ 100 x LGalaxy Probably related but historically discovered very differently. Quasars are rare objects, found at large distances and so bright that they hide the light from the galaxy. This lead to the separate classification. Quasars include radiogalaxies and blazars which have supermassive BH in their centers. NGC 1275 NGC 5548 courtesy of A.V. Filippenko courtesy of K.T. Korista First optical spectrum of an AGN was obtained at Lick Observatory by E.A. Fath in 1908 as part of his dissertation work. He noted the presence of strong emission lines in the nebula NGC 1068. • But it took Carl Seyfert (1943) to identify the new class of objects (NGC 1068, NGC 1275 1, NGC 3516, NGC 4051, NGC 4151, NGC 7469): i) The lines are broad (up to 8500 km/s, full width at zero intensity) ii) The hydrogen lines sometimes are broader than the other lines. Seyfert Galaxies Type 1 and 2 • Type 1 Seyfert galaxies have both narrow and broadened optical spectral emission lines. The broad lines imply gas velocities of 1000 - 5000 km/s very close to the nucleus. • Type 2 Seyfert galaxies have narrow emission lines only (but still wider than emission lines in normal galaxies) implying gas velocities of ~ 500-1000 km/s. These narrow lines are due to low density gas clouds at larger distances (than the broad line clouds) from the nucleus. Seyfert: Active phase of a Spiral Galaxy (?) • The Seyfert are found in spiral galaxies, about 2-5% of all spiral galaxies. • They have bright central nuclei, P~1036 - 1039 erg/s NGC 4258. Credit: Nature. Seyfert Lifetimes (Woltjer 1959) Seyfert galaxies 2% of spiral galaxies => τSyefert ≥ 2×108 yrs i) If 2% of spirals are always Seyferts => τSyefert = τHubble (1010 yrs) ii) If all spirals pass through a Seyfert phase => τSyefert = 2% τHubble = 2×108 yrs Seyfert Nuclear Mass (Woltjer 1959) The nucleus is unresolved => R < 100pc The emission lines characteristic of a lowdensity gas, => R > 1pc If the nucleus is gravitationally bound, virial 2 2 argument gives: u r u ⎞ ⎛ r ⎞ 9⎛ M≈ G Newton = 10 ⎜ 3 M ⎟ ⎜ ⎟ ⎝ 10 km / s ⎠ ⎝ 10 pc ⎠ Thus the mass of the nucleus can be inferred to be in the range: M ≈ 10 9 ±1 M Quasars • Quasars are the most luminous AGN, and among the most luminous objects in the sky at every wavelength. • • Unlike Seyfert, quasars are typically found in elliptic galaxies • The angular resolution of radio observations was good enough to identify the strongest radio sources with individual optical objects, often galaxies, but sometimes stellar-appearing sources • However, the photographic spectra were very confusing, as they showed strong very broad emission lines at unidentified wavelengths. • Photometry of these objects revealed that they are anomalously blue relative to normal stars. • The nature of these ``radio stars'' was very uncertain. They became known simply as quasi-stellar-radio-sources. Originally discovered as a result of the first radio surveys of the sky in the late 1950s Quasars 3C 273, breakthrough (Schmidt 1963) Emission lines are hydrogen Balmer-series and Mg II 2798 at z = 0.158. This was about 10 x zSeyfert and among the largest measured at the time d = cz / H 0 = 470 h0−1Mpc Disturbing enormous luminosity implied; 3C 273 was and remains the brightest known quasar (B = 13.1 mag). Using the formula for the distance modulus m − M = 5 log(cz / H 0 / Mpc) + 25 the absolute magnitude of 3C 273 is MB = -25.3 + 5log h0, which is about 100 times as luminous as normal bright spirals like the Milky Way or M31. Quasar 3C 273 with a jet (Chandra X-ray Observatory) Quasars spectral properties Fλ = C λ α Alloin et al. (1995) + Elvis et al. (1994) • Very broad spectral energy distribution (SED): radio, infrared, optical, X-ray, gamma-ray • Unlike spectra of stars or galaxies, quasars spectra cannot be described in terms of blackbody emission at a single temperature, or as a composite over a small range in temperature. • Non-thermal processes, primarily synchrotron radiation, were thus invoked early on to explain quasar spectra. Quasars’ variability • • • Quasars are variable in every waveband, in the continuum and in the broad emission lines. Optical continuum variability of quasars was established even before the emission-line redshifts were understood (e.g, Matthews and Sandage 1963), and variability was one of the first properties of quasars to be explored in detail (e.g., Smith and Hoffleit 1963). Many quasars were found to be variable at the 0.3-0.5 mag level over time scales of a few months. A few sources were found to vary significantly on time scales as short as a few days. Quasars’ Variability courtesy of Bill Keel Quasars’ Size Short time variability and coherence arguments imply: LQuasar ≤ cτ var 1 light day = 2.5 × 1015 cm 200 AU This was immediately perceived as a major problem, since a nucleus comparable in size to the Solar System is emitting hundreds of times as much energy as an entire galaxy !! Quasars’ importance... • Might involve black holes (Zel’dovich & Novikov 1963, Salpeter 1963) • They might play a role in galaxy formation (Burbidge, Burbidge &Sandage 1963) • Hight luminosity, potential for cosmological probes at the largest distances Radio Galaxies: Cygnus A relativistic electrons Synchrotron radiation N(E)dE = N 0 E − s dE ⇒ Fν ∝ N 0 B 1+ s 2 Cygnus A radio galaxy. Image R.A. Perley, J.J. Cowan, J.W. Dreher, and NRAO/AUI/VLA Extended Compact ν − s −1 2 Radio Properties of Quasars Compact Extended Angular size Unresolved, R≲10-2pc Resolved, R≲Mpc Emission Synchrotron Synchrotron Optical Depth Thick Thin Spectral Index Flat, α≲0.5 Steep, α≳0.7 Radio Properties of Quasars Faranoff-Riley I Not edge brightened, subsonic outflows Faranoff-Riley II Edge brightened, supersonic outflows Bridle et al. (1984) Laing & Bridle (1987) • Bridle & Perley (1984) give L (1.4 GHz) = 1032 erg s-1 Hz-1 as the transition specific luminosity between the two types. • Quasars are FR II sources. Centaurus A (HST + VLA) Centaurus A radio galaxy. Image: NRAO/AUI/VLA and NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope QSOs Because of their particularly blue spectra, quasars can be isolated as U-excess objects (Ryle & Sandage,1964) Hewitt & Burbidge (1993) QSOs • Ryle and Sandage (1964) found a large population of optically selected, quasi-stellar-objects (QSO) that could be quasars • However, at long wavelengths (radio) they were typically 100 times fainter than radio selected quasars • QSOs: subclass of radio quiet AGN, 10-20 times more numerous than radio loud quasars Rr − o = Fradio (6cm) o Foptical (4400 A) Radio Loud Radio Quiet Rr − o = 10 − 1000 0.1 < Rr − o < 1 Blazars • Blazars are a class of AGN that are radio sources and consist of both Optically Violent Variables (OVVs) and BL Lac objects (sources showing a featureless optical spectrum) and Flat Spectrum Radio Quasars (sources showing strong and broad emission lines) • Their spectra are flat and, among AGNs, blazars emit over the widest range of frequencies, and have been detected from radio to gamma-ray. • They are highly variable AGNs, visible and gamma-ray variability from minutes to days.