10 results on '"Meyer, Eileen T."'
Search Results
2. Characterization of the Western Pictor A Hotspot in Hard X-Rays with NuSTAR.
- Author
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Shaik, Aamil, Meyer, Eileen T., Reddy, Karthik, Laha, Sibasish, and Georganopoulos, Markos
- Subjects
- *
SYNCHROTRON radiation , *ACTIVE galactic nuclei , *HARD X-rays , *SOFT X rays , *RADIO galaxies - Abstract
The origin of X-ray emission from the resolved kiloparsec-scale jets and hotspots of many active galactic nuclei remains uncertain, particularly where the X-ray emission is separate from the radio-optical synchrotron component. Possible explanations include synchrotron emission from a second electron population and external Compton or synchrotron self-Compton processes—alternatives which imply very different physical conditions within the jet. Until recently, X-ray studies of resolved jets and hotspots have been restricted to below ∼10 keV, often showing a hard spectral index indicating a spectral peak beyond this energy range. Here we present NuSTAR observations of the nearby powerful radio galaxy Pictor A, in which we clearly detect the western hotspot at approximately 4′ from the host galaxy, the most significant detection of hotspot emission above 10 keV to date. The NuSTAR spectrum is best fit by a single power law of index Γ = 2.03 ± 0.04; an exponential cutoff gives a 1 σ lower limit on the cutoff energy of 40.7 keV. We confirm previous findings of variations in the soft X-ray flux detected by Chandra over the 2000 to 2015 period, at a significance of 6.5 σ. This rises to >8 σ in the common 3–8 keV band using the combined 22 yr span of Chandra and NuSTAR observations. The variability of the western Pictor A hotspot strongly confirms the previously argued synchrotron nature of the X-ray emission for the hotspot, while the lower bound to the spectral cutoff energy implies electron energies in the hotspot reach up to at least a few TeV. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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3. Powerful Radio-loud Quasars Are Triggered by Galaxy Mergers in the Cosmic Bright Ages.
- Author
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Breiding, Peter, Chiaberge, Marco, Lambrides, Erini, Meyer, Eileen T., Willner, S. P., Hilbert, Bryan, Haas, Martin, Miley, George, Perlman, Eric S., Barthel, Peter, O'Dea, Christopher P., Capetti, Alessandro, Wilkes, Belinda, Baum, Stefi A., Macchetto, Duccio F., Sparks, William, Tremblay, Grant, and Norman, Colin
- Subjects
QUASARS ,ACTIVE galactic nuclei ,GALACTIC nuclei ,ELLIPTICAL galaxies ,GALACTIC evolution ,SUPERMASSIVE black holes ,GALAXY mergers - Abstract
While supermassive black holes are ubiquitous features of galactic nuclei, only a small minority are observed during episodes of luminous accretion. The physical mechanism(s) driving the onset of fueling and ignition in these active galactic nuclei (AGN) are still largely unknown for many galaxies and AGN-selection criteria. Attention has focused on AGN triggering by means of major galaxy mergers gravitationally funneling gas toward the galactic center, with evidence both for and against this scenario. However, several recent studies have found that radio-loud AGN overwhelmingly reside in ongoing or recent major galaxy mergers. In this study, we test the hypothesis that major galaxy mergers are important triggers for radio-loud AGN activity in powerful quasars during cosmic noon (1 ≲ z ≲ 2). To this end, we compare Hubble Space Telescope WFC3/IR observations of the z > 1 3CR radio-loud broad-lined quasars to three matched radio-quiet quasar control samples. We find strong evidence for major-merger activity in nearly all radio-loud AGN, in contrast to the much lower merger fraction in the radio-quiet AGN. These results suggest major galaxy mergers are key ingredients in launching powerful radio jets. Given many of our radio-loud quasars are blue, our results present a possible challenge to the "blowout" paradigm of galaxy evolution models in which blue quasars are the quiescent end result following a period of red quasar feedback initiated by a galaxy merger. Finally, we find a tight correlation between black hole mass and host galaxy luminosity for these different high-redshift AGN samples that is inconsistent with those observed for local elliptical galaxies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Circumnuclear Dust in AP Librae and the Source of Its VHE Emission.
- Author
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Roychowdhury, Agniva, Meyer, Eileen T., Georganopoulos, Markos, Breiding, Peter, and Petropoulou, Maria
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INVERSE Compton scattering , *GAMMA ray bursts , *COSMIC background radiation , *BL Lacertae objects , *PHOTON scattering , *MICROWAVE scattering , *DUST , *MINERAL dusts - Abstract
The broad high-energy spectral component in blazars is usually attributed to various inverse Compton scattering processes in the relativistic jet, but has not been clearly identified in most cases due to degeneracies in physical models. AP Librae, a low-synchrotron-peaking BL Lac object (LBL) detected in 2015 by H.E.S.S. at very high energies (VHE; >0.5 TeV), has an extremely broad high-energy spectrum, covering ∼9 decades in energy. Standard synchrotron self-Compton models generally fail to reproduce the VHE emission, which has led to the suggestion that it might arise not from the blazar core, but on kiloparsec scales from inverse Compton (IC) scattering of cosmic microwave background (CMB) photons by a still-relativistic jet (IC/CMB). IC/CMB models for the TeV emission of AP Librae in prior works have implied a high level of infrared emission from the kiloparsec-scale jet. With newly obtained Hubble Space Telescope (HST) imaging, we obtain a deep upper limit on the kiloparsec-scale jet emission at 1.6 μm, well below the expected level. High-resolution Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array imaging in bands 3–9 reveals a residual dust-disk signature after core subtraction, with a clearly thermal spectrum, and an extent (∼500 pc) that matches with a nonjet residual emission seen after point-spread function subtraction in our 1.6 μm HST imaging. We find that the unusually broad GeV and VHE emission in AP Librae can be reproduced through the combined IC scattering of photons from the CMB and the dust disk, respectively, by electrons in both the blazar core and subkiloparsec jet. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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5. Lower-luminosity Obscured AGN Host Galaxies Are Not Predominantly in Major-merging Systems at Cosmic Noon.
- Author
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Lambrides, Erini L., Chiaberge, Marco, Heckman, Timothy, Kirkpatrick, Allison, Meyer, Eileen T., Petric, Andreea, Hall, Kirsten, Long, Arianna, Watts, Duncan J., Gilli, Roberto, Simons, Raymond, Tchernyshyov, Kirill, Rodriguez-Gomez, Vicente, Vito, Fabio, de la Vega, Alexander, Davis, Jeffrey R., Kocevski, Dale D, and Norman, Colin
- Subjects
ACTIVE galactic nuclei ,GALAXY mergers ,SUPERMASSIVE black holes ,GALAXIES ,CLASSIFICATION of galaxies ,SPACE telescopes - Abstract
For over 60 yr, the scientific community has studied actively growing central supermassive black holes (active galactic nuclei, AGNs), but fundamental questions on their genesis remain unanswered. Numerical simulations and theoretical arguments show that black hole growth occurs during short-lived periods (âĽ10
7 â€"108 yr) of powerful accretion. Major mergers are commonly invoked as the most likely dissipative process to trigger the rapid fueling of AGNs. If the AGNâ€"merger paradigm is true, we expect galaxy mergers to coincide with black hole accretion during a heavily obscured AGN phase (NH > 1023 cmâ'2 ). Starting from one of the largest samples of obscured AGNs at 0.5 < z < 3.1, we select 40 nonstarbursting lower-luminosity obscured AGNs. We then construct a one-to-one matched redshift and near-IR magnitude-matched nonstarbursting inactive galaxy control sample. Combining deep color Hubble Space Telescope imaging and a novel method of human classification, we test the mergerâ€"AGN paradigm prediction that heavily obscured AGNs are strongly associated with galaxies undergoing a major merger. On the total sample of 80 galaxies, we estimate each individual classifier’s accuracy at identifying merging galaxies/postmerging systems and isolated galaxies. We calculate the probability of each galaxy being in either a major merger or an isolated system, given the accuracy of the human classifiers and the individual classifications of each galaxy. We do not find statistically significant evidence that obscured AGNs at cosmic noon are predominantly found in systems with evidence of significant merging/postmerging features. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
6. Merger or Not: Accounting for Human Biases in Identifying Galactic Merger Signatures.
- Author
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Lambrides, Erini L., Watts, Duncan J., Chiaberge, Marco, Tchernyshyov, Kirill, Kirkpatrick, Allison, Meyer, Eileen T., Heckman, Timothy, Simons, Raymond, Amram, Oz, Hall, Kirsten R., Long, Arianna, and Norman, Colin
- Subjects
GALAXY mergers ,GALACTIC evolution ,HUMAN beings ,EVOLUTIONARY theories - Abstract
Significant galaxy mergers throughout cosmic time play a fundamental role in theories of galaxy evolution. The widespread usage of human classifiers to visually assess whether galaxies are in merging systems remains a fundamental component of many morphology studies. Studies that employ human classifiers usually construct a control sample, and rely on the assumption that the bias introduced by using humans will be evenly applied to all samples. In this work, we test this assumption and develop methods to correct for it. Using the standard binomial statistical methods employed in many morphology studies, we find that the merger fraction, error, and the significance of the difference between two samples are dependent on the intrinsic merger fraction of any given sample. We propose a method of quantifying merger biases of individual human classifiers and incorporate these biases into a full probabilistic model to determine the merger fraction and the probability of an individual galaxy being in a merger. Using 14 simulated human responses and accuracies, we are able to correctly label a galaxy as merger or isolated to within 1% of the truth. Using 14 real human responses on a set of realistic mock galaxy simulation snapshots our model is able to recover the pre-coalesced merger fraction to within 10%. Our method can not only increase the accuracy of studies probing the merger state of galaxies at cosmic noon, but also can be used to construct more accurate training sets in machine-learning studies that use human classified data sets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. X-Ray-to-radio Offset Inference from Low-count X-Ray Jets.
- Author
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Reddy, Karthik, Georganopoulos, Markos, and Meyer, Eileen T.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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8. OPTICAL PROPER MOTION MEASUREMENTS OF THE M87 JET: NEW RESULTS FROM THE HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE.
- Author
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MEYER, EILEEN T., SPARKS, W. B., BIRETTA, J. A., ANDERSON, JAY, SOHN, SANGMO TONY, DER MAREL, ROELAND P. VAN, NORMAN, COLIN, and MASANORI NAKAMURA
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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9. FROM THE BLAZAR SEQUENCE TO THE BLAZAR ENVELOPE: REVISITING THE RELATIVISTIC JET DICHOTOMY IN RADIO-LOUD ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI.
- Author
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MEYER, EILEEN T., FOSSATI, GIOVANNI, GEORGANOPOULOS, MARKOS, and LISTER, MATTHEW L.
- Subjects
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BL Lacertae objects , *RELATIVISTIC astrophysics , *ASTROPHYSICAL jets , *GALACTIC nuclei , *SYNCHROTRONS - Abstract
We revisit the concept of a blazar sequence that relates the synchrotron peak frequency (vpeak) in blazars with synchrotron peak luminosity (Lpeak in vLv) using a large sample of radio-loud active galactic nuclei. We present observational evidence that the blazar sequence is formed from two populations in the synchrotron vpeak-Lpeak plane, each forming an upper edge to an envelope of progressively misaligned blazars, and connecting to an adjacent group of radio galaxies having jets viewed at much larger angles to the line of sight. When binned by jet kinetic power (Lkin; as measured through a scaling relationship with extended radio power), we find that radio core dominance decreases with decreasing synchrotron Lpeak, revealing that sources in the envelope are generally more misaligned. We find population-based evidence of velocity gradients in jets at low kinetic powers (∼1042-1044.5 erg s-1), corresponding to Fanaroff-Riley (FR) I radio galaxies and most BL Lac objects. These low jet power "weak-jet" sources, thought to exhibit radiatively inefficient accretion, are distinguished from the population of non-decelerating, low synchrotron-peaking (LSP) blazars and FR II radio galaxies ("strong" jets) which are thought to exhibit radiatively efficient accretion. The two-population interpretation explains the apparent contradiction of the existence of highly core-dominated, low-power blazars at both low and high synchrotron peak frequencies, and further implies that most intermediate synchrotron peak sources are not intermediate in intrinsic jet power between LSP and high synchrotron-peaking (HSP) sources, but are more misaligned versions of HSP sources with similar jet powers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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10. FERMI RULES OUT THE INVERSE COMPTON/CMB MODEL FOR THE LARGE-SCALE JET X-RAY EMISSION OF 3C 273.
- Author
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Meyer, Eileen T. and Georganopoulos, Markos
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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