General Assembly of IAU, Symposium #238 Black Holes: From Stars to Galaxies

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General Assembly of IAU, Symposium #238 Black Holes: From Stars to Galaxies Aug 22, 2006, Prague, Czech Republic Presented by: George Chartas (Penn State) In collaboration with: Cristian Saez(Penn State), Xinyu Dai(OSU), Michael Eracleous(Penn State), Niel Brandt(Penn State), Bret Lehmer(Penn State), Franz Bauer(Columbia), Gordon Garmire (Penn State) X-ray Spectral Evolution of AGN

description

X-ray Spectral Evolution of AGN. Presented by: George Chartas (Penn State) In collaboration with: Cristian Saez(Penn State), Xinyu Dai(OSU), Michael Eracleous(Penn State), Niel Brandt(Penn State), Bret Lehmer(Penn State), Franz Bauer(Columbia) , Gordon Garmire (Penn State). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of General Assembly of IAU, Symposium #238 Black Holes: From Stars to Galaxies

Page 1: General Assembly of IAU, Symposium #238 Black Holes: From Stars to Galaxies

General Assembly of IAU, Symposium #238

Black Holes: From Stars to GalaxiesAug 22, 2006, Prague, Czech Republic

Presented by: George Chartas (Penn State)In collaboration with: Cristian Saez(Penn State), Xinyu Dai(OSU), Michael Eracleous(Penn State),

Niel Brandt(Penn State), Bret Lehmer(Penn State), Franz Bauer(Columbia), Gordon Garmire (Penn State)

X-ray Spectral Evolution of AGN

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Evolution of AGN

• Commonly used methods of studying the evolution of AGN include :

(a) Determining the evolution of the optical and X-ray luminosity functions and optical and X-ray space densities of AGN.

(b) Determining the evolution of the host galaxies.

(c) Determining the evolution of the spectra of the AGN ( vs z,ox vs z).

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Evolution of Space Density of type-I AGN

The space density of type-I AGN changes significantly with redshift and luminosity.

The redshift at which the space density peaks changes with luminosity from z ~ 0.5-0.7 for logLx = 42-43 ergs s-1 to z ~ 2 for logLx = 45-46 ergs s-1.

The amount of change in the space density is also strongly dependent on luminosity. ~ 10 for logLx = 42-43 ergs s-1 ~ 100 for logLx = 45-46 ergs s-1

The space density of low luminosity AGN is found to decline at high redshift.

Hasinger et al (2005)

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Evolution of Host Galaxy

Barger et al. 2005

The absolute rest-frame 5000 A luminosities of the host galaxies vs. redshift for sources inthe ACS GOODS-North region of the CDF-N. Triangles : LX > 1044 ergs s-1

Diamonds: LX = 1043 - 1044 ergs s-1

Squares: LX = 1042 - 1043 ergs s-1

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Evolution of Quasars

• One might expect to detect a change in the X-ray emission and accretion properties of quasars to accompany the dramatic change in the number density of quasars between z=1 and z=2 (Fan et al. 2001).

• Many X-ray surveys have attempted to find such a change by constraining and the optical-to-X-ray spectral index, ox

• The evolution of with z is still debatable (eg., Bechtold et al. 2003, Vignali et al. 2003, Grupe et al. 2005)

• There is no indication that correlates with luminosity for low z quasars (George et al. 2000, Reeves & Turner 2000)

Evolution of quasar comoving number density as a function of z (Fan et al. 2001)

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ox dependence on the 2500 A monochromatic luminosity.

The main sample is given by filled circles, the high-z sample by open squares, and the Sy 1 sample by open Triangles. Strateva et al. (2005)

Correlation of ox with z, only 1 sigma significant if the lUV dependence is taken into account. Strateva et al. (2005)

Dependence of aox of AGN with UV luminosity and z

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X-ray Spectra of Radio-Quiet Quasars at z > 4

Shemmer et al. (2005) performed an investigation of moderate-to-high quality X-ray spectra of 10 quasars (z = 4 - 6.28).

• They do not find any significant difference between the spectra of these high z quasars compared to ones at lower z.

• If quasars have been evolving constantly over time observations of the most distant ones may provided the most ``leverage'' for constraining any changes in the X-ray spectra over cosmic time.

= 1.97 +/- 0.05, NH < 3 X 1021 cm-2 (mean values)Fe Kα EW < 190 eV and R < 1.2

χ2 contours from joint fit forentire and common energy ranges

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X-ray Spectra of Radio-Quiet Quasars at z > 4

Shemmer et al. (2005) find significant scatter of but no systematic trend of with absolute B magnitude and redshift.

|d/dz| < 0.04

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• Employing the lensing magnification effect to observe high redshift quasars allows us to probe the luminosity range of 1043-45 ergs s-1. (This luminosity range is practically inaccessible by most Chandra observations of unlensed quasars of similarly high redshift.)

• The lensing magnification (from a few to ~ 100) allows us to obtain moderate to high S/N spectra

• The main scientific goal of our survey of quasars was to study the evolution of spectroscopic properties of high redshift RQQs by searching for a possible correlation between photon index and luminosity for high redshift quasars

Gravitational lensing as a tool to study AGN evolution

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Evolution of Radio Quiet AGN

- LX diagram from our recent analyses of high redshift (z > 1.5) radio quiet AGN. Significant correlations are found between and the 0.2-2keV (2-10keV) luminosities. The correlations are significant at the 99.9997% (98.6%) confidence levels, respectively. (Dai, Chartas, Eracleous & Garmire 2004)

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Evolution of Radio Quiet Quasars

• Photon index vs. 2-10 keV luminosity for low redshift (z < 0.1 mostly) AGN. No significant correlation is found (George et al. 2000)

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Evolution of Radio Quiet AGN

To confirm the previously observed correlation between and luminosity we have:

• Observed additional high z lensed AGN as part of the Chandra GTO program

• Have analyzed moderate-to-high redshift radio quiet AGN observed in the deep field observations performed with Chandra

The larger sample allowed us to:

• Place tighter constraints on the correlation

• Test the correlation in narrower redshift bands and thus better constrain the epochs at which possible changes in the average emission properties of AGN occurred.

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Evolution of Radio Quiet AGN

Recent lensed high redshift AGN observed with Chandra and added to our sample

Q 0142-100

BRI 0952-0115

Q 1017-207

SBS 1520+530

SDSS 0903+5028

Object zs ms Exposure (ks)

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I=16.47

I=18.3

I=16.78

I=17.61

R=19.56

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Evolution of Radio Quiet AGN

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Using Chandra Deep Field Observations to Study AGN Evolution

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Using Chandra Deep Field Observations to Study AGN Evolution

N Counts

0 500 1000 1500 20001.0

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umbe

r of

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rces

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CDF - S, z > 1.5CDF - N, z > 1.5

CDF - SCDF - N

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Using Chandra Deep Field Observations to Study AGN Evolution

Source Selection

Selected the radio-quiet AGN from the CDF surveys with Nph (0.5-8 keV) > 200 cnts (~130 sources with z > 0.5)

Radio loud objects were filtered out using R = f5GHz/f4400A > 10 Afonso et al. (2006), Richards (2000)

(~22/152 RLQs, ~14%).

Spectral Analysis 200 < Nph < 600 Cash statistic Nph > 600 2 statistic Model : Absorbed power-law Fitting range: (a) 0.5-7keV observed frame (b) 2-10keV rest frame

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Using Chandra Deep Field Observations to Study AGN Evolution

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Using Chandra Deep Field Observations to Study AGN Evolution

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Using Chandra Deep Field Observations to Study AGN Evolution

Histograms of and NH

<> = 1.64 +/- 0.34

<> ~ 2.6 x 1022 cm-2

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Using Chandra Deep Field Observations to Study AGN Evolution

Correlation Results:

- L(2-10 keV) & 1.6 < z < 3.3Spearman:rc = 0.57 P(r > rc) = 7.1 x 10-4

Pearson:r = 0.55P(r > rc) = 1.1 x 10-3

- L(2-5 keV) & 1.6 < z < 3.3Spearman:rc = 0.59 P(r > rc) = 4.3 x 10-4

Pearson:re = 0.61P(r > re) = 2.3 x 10-4

All spectral fits performed in the 0.5-7 keV observed frame

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Using Chandra Deep Field Observations to Study AGN Evolution

Correlation Results:

- L(2-10 keV) & 1.6 < z < 3.3Spearman:rc = 0.43 P(r > rc) = 2.4 x 10-2

Pearson:rc = 0.49 P(r > rc) = 7.6 x 10-3

- L(2-5 keV) & 1.6 < z < 3.3Spearman:rc = 0.54 P(r > rc) = 2.9 x 10-3

Pearson:rc = 0.61 P(r > rc) = 5.8 x 10-4

All spectral fits performed in the 2-10 keV rest-frame

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Using Chandra Deep Field Observations to Study AGN Evolution

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Using Chandra Deep Field Observations to Study AGN Evolution

Correlation Results:

- L(2-10 keV) & 1.6 < z < 3.3Spearman (1e43 - 5e45erg/s):rc = 0.6 P(r > rc) = 5 x 10-7

Pearson (1e43 - 2e45erg/s):rc = 0.51 P(r > rc) = 1.4 x 10-4

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Using Chandra Deep Field Observations to Study AGN Evolution

LX

=η ˙ M c2 ∝ M (˙ M

M)∝ M (

˙ M ˙ M Edd

)∝ M ˙ m

Possible Interpretations of the LX - Correlation

First Interpretation• Narrow range of M at high z• Large range of accretion rate•

Second Interpretation• Narrow range of accretion rate at high z• Large range in M• €

LX ∝ ˙ m

LX ∝ M

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Using Chandra Deep Field Observations to Study Quasar Evolution

Physical Interpretations of LX -

• Hot corona model by Haardt et al. 1997predicts that

increases with of the corona decreases with T of the corona

• If the corona is dominated by electron-positron pairs this model alsopredicts that

Log Lx

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Conclusions

• We confirm the Lx - correlation for radio quiet AGN at high z based on the spectral analysis of the CDF surveys.

• We find that the strength of Lx - correlation is z dependent and peaks at z ~ 2.2

• The Hot Corona model predicts the Lx - correlation

• The redshift dependence of the correlation suggests that quasars near the peak of their comoving number density are accreting near Eddington and have different accretion properties than their low-z counterparts

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Under the assumptions:

(a) that high-z quasars emit near Eddington

(b) that the optical depth of the corona is dominated by electron-positron pairs.

(c) The observed range in luminosity is due to a range in BH masses (~ 2-3 orders of magnitude)

the hot corona model of Haardt & Maraschi 1993 predicts :

log[L(2-10keV)]

The redshift dependence of the correlation implies that quasars near the peak of their comoving number density are accreting near Eddington and have different accretion properties than their low-z counterparts

Evolution of Radio Quiet Quasars

Possible Interpretation of -Lx is based on the hot corona model (Haardt & Maraschi 1993, Haardt, Maraschi, & Ghisellini 1997)

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Conclusions

(a) The spectral slope of the 1.4 < z < 4 radio-loud quasars appears not to vary significantly over 4 orders of magnitude in 2-10 keV luminosity. We do not find a significant correlation between the spectral slope and X-ray luminosity as found in our 1.5 < z < 4 radio-quiet quasar sample.

(b) The spectral slopes of the radio-loud quasars of the sample are significantly flatter than those of the radio-quiet sample possibly due to contamination from jet emission.

(c) The limited number of quasars in the present sample combined with the medium S/N of several of the observations may have led to an unaccounted for systematic effect. Additional observations of z ~ 2 lensed radio-loud quasars with better S/N will allow us to obtain tighter constraints on a possible correlation between and X-ray luminosity.

(d) The X-ray variability of the high redshifts radio-loud quasars of our sample is consistent with the known correlation between excess variance and luminosity observed in NLS1s when extrapolated to the larger luminosities of the present sample.

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CREDITS

DirectorGeorge Chartas

ActorsXinyu Dai

Michael Eracleous

Digital Camera PersonnelGordon Garmire

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Haardt, Maraschi, & Ghisellini (1997) predicted:

increases with , the optical depth of the Compton scattering.

decreases with T, the temperature of the corona.

Model Predictions

Optical Depth of IC Scattering

Temperature of Corona

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• Haardt, Maraschi, & Ghisellini (1997) also predicted:

In COMPACT CORONA, where the pair production dominates, Log Lx

• This is similar to what we have observed.

In a “Compact” Corona

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Two Possible Interpretations of the Correlation

LX

=η ˙ M c2 ∝ M (˙ M

M)∝ M (

˙ M ˙ M Edd

)∝ M ˙ m

• Narrow range (of order a few) of M at high redshift.

• Large range of .

First Interpretation

m&

∝→∝ mLX &

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• Opposite. The range is narrow, close to Eddington limits, and M range is large.

• The lc is the “compactness” of the corona.

• Haardt & Maraschi (1993) predicted that M lc, increases as lc increases.

Second Interpretation

lc (Coronal Compactness)

m&

LX ∝ M ∝ lc → τ ∝ Γ

• Consistent with semianlyti-cal model of Hauffmann & Haehnelt (2000) for the cosmological evolution of super massive black hole and their fueling rates.

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Evolution of Radio Quiet Quasars

• We recently presented results from a survey of relatively high redshift (1.5<z<4) gravitationally lensed radio-quiet quasars (RQQs) observed with the Chandra and

XMM-Newton (Dai et al. 2004).

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• Using gravitational lensing as a tool to study the evolution of distant quasars

• Gravitationally Lensed High-z Radio Quiet Quasars

Near Eddington Luminosites at redshifts above z~1.5

• High-z Radio Quiet Quasars from the Chandra Deep Field Surveys

• Conclusions

Evolution of Quasars

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Gravitational lensing as a tool to study AGN evolution

Conceptual diagram of the gravitational deflection of light in a quad GL system.

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Understanding the Evolution of Quasars

Soft photons

IC scatteringBlack Hole

Accretion Disc

Corona

Corona

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Using Chandra Deep Field Observations to Study AGN Evolution

Histograms of Lx and z