Title: ACTIVE%20GALACTIC%20NUCLEI%20and%20UNIFICATION%20SCHEMES
1ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI and UNIFICATION SCHEMES
- Paul J. Wiita
- Georgia State University, Atlanta, USA
- Winter School on Black Hole Astrophysics
- APCTP, Pohang, January 17-20, 2006
2Outline
- Observational classification peculiar vs. active
galaxies - Key properties of different AGN classes
- Fundamental reasons for SMBH model
- Microvariablity of Different AGN types
- Unification schemes for AGN
3Start with the Mildly Active or Peculiar Galaxies
- STARBURST galaxies -- 100's of stars forming per
year, but spread over some 100's of parsecs. - Other PECULIAR galaxies involve collisions or
mergers between galaxies. - Sometimes produce strong spiral structure (e.g.
M51, the "Whirlpool") - Sometimes leave long tidal tails (e.g. the
"Antennae" galaxies) - Sometimes leave "ring" galaxy structures--an E
passing through a S.
4Peculiar Galaxies Starburst (NGC 7742) ,
Whirlpool (M51), Antennae (NGC 4038/9) in IR,
Ring (AM 0644-741)
5Colliding Galaxies
- Cartwheel ring galaxy
- Antennae, w/ starbursts and a simulation a
collision in progress
64 MAIN CLASSES of REAL AGN
- Radio Galaxies
- Quasars
- Seyfert Galaxies
- BL Lacertae Objects (now more often called
Blazars with some Quasars included) - All are characterized by central regions with
NON-THERMAL radiation dominating over stellar
(thermal) emission
7 Thermal vs. Non-Thermal Spectra Normal
galaxy spectra arise from stars, AGN mostly
synchrotron and inverse Compton
8RADIO GALAXIES
- All (nearly) are in Elliptical galaxies, usually
giant Es - Two oppositely directed JETS emerge from the
galactic nucleus - They often feed HOT-SPOTS and and LOBES on either
side of the galaxy - Radio source sizes often 300 kpc or more --- much
bigger than their host galaxies optical extents.
- Head-tail and wide-angle-tail radio galaxies
arise when jets are bent by the ram-pressure of
ICM/IGM gas as the host galaxy moves through it. - For powerful sources only one jet is seen this
is because of RELATIVISTIC DOPPER BOOSTING the
approaching jet appears MUCH brighter than an
intrinsically equal receding jet since moving so
FAST - Can yield CORE DOMINATED RGs
9Radio Galaxy Centaurus A
10Cygnus A and M87 Jet
11M87 on all Scales1.3cm VLBI down to 0.07
pc(100 RS) while 90 cm VLA shows bubbles out to
70 kpc
12Radio Lobes Can Dwarf Big Host Galaxies
- Fornax A, about 400 kpc across
- 3C 296, about 150 kpc across (VLA images)
13Fanaroff-Riley Classification
- FR I RGs (M87) are weaker and have the peak of
their flux from the inner portion (often jet or
plume dominated) 3C 31 (VLA 20 cm) - FR II RGs (most previous) are more powerful,
possess hot-spots and dominated by the extended
lobes - LR from 1041 to 1046 erg/s
14More FR I RGs3C75 3C449 3C83.1 (at 6 and 20
cm from VLA)
15Ledlow-Owen Relation FR II/I
- Greater radio luminosity needed to make an FR II
if the jets emerge from a more luminous host
galaxy - Probably implies many FR IIs turn into FR Is if
they entrain too much gas and slow from
relativistic speeds
16Core Dominated RG (M86)
17Doppler Boosting and Apparent Velocity
- Dramatic increases in observed flux density if
jet has high v ?c and small l-o-s angle, ?. - Superluminal apparent transverse velocities also
seen frequently in VLBI measurements of knots
Doppler factor, ? Lorentz factor, ? and spectral
index,? Exponent 3 for knots, 2 for continuous
flow
18QUASAR PROPERTIES
- QUASI-STELLAR-OBJECT (QSO) i.e., it looks like
a STAR BUT NON-THERMAL SPECTRUM ?UV excess (not
like a star) - BROAD EMISSION LINES ? Rapid motions
- VERY HIGH REDSHIFTS ? not a star, but FAR away.
The current (2005) convincing record redshift is
z 6.5, i.e., light emitted in FAR UV at 100 nm
is received by us in the near IR at 750 nm - HUGE DISTANCES ? VERY LUMINOUS
19 NEWER QUASAR DISCOVERIES
- Only about 10 are RADIO LOUD
- Most show some VARIABILITY in POWER
- OVV (Optically Violently Variable) QUASARS change
brightness by 50 or more in a year and are
highly polarized (gt 3 linear in optical) - QUASARS are AGN surrounding galaxies detected,
though small nucleus emits 10-1000 times
MORE light than 1011 stars! Brighter than a
TRILLION suns - Lbol gt 1046 erg/s would qualify as a quasar
20Quasar 3C 273
- Radio loud
- Rare OPTICAL jet, but otherwise looks like a star
- Relatively nearby quasar
21Redshifted Spectrum of 3C 273
22Typical Quasar Appearance
- Most are actually very faint
- BUT their huge redshifts imply they are billions
of light-years away and intrinsically POWERFUL
23Quasar Host Galaxies
- Even by z 3 many
- QSOs were in forming galaxies with multiple
components - Most quasar host galaxies have MBlt-23 and are
extremely luminous themselves
24Radio Loud Quasar, 3C 175
Most quasars do vary with most changing
noticeably over the course of a year or
less. These rapid variations imply small
sizes. Immense powers emerging from a volume
smaller than the solar system.
25Quasar Emission Lines
- Broad emission lines have FWHM gt 5000 km/s
- Usually have narrow cores w/ FWHM lt 2000 km/s
- Diagnostics of T and density, implying TBLR ?
15000 K and 108 lt n lt 1012 cm-3 for BLR - Breadth implies lines form from rapidly moving
gas clouds at lt 1 pc from core, random or in
disk wind - Lower ionization state of NELs implies at much
greater distance from the ionizing core of AGN
100 pc - Locations of BLR and BH mass can come from
reverberation mapping line variability lags
continuum
26 SEYFERT GALAXIES
- Sa, Sb galaxies (sometimes S0) with BRIGHT,
SEMI-STELLAR NUCLEI - NON-THERMAL STRONG EMISSION LINES
- VARIABLE in lt 1 yr ? COMPACT CORE
- Type 1 Broad Emission lines (like QSOs), strong
in X-rays LX gt 1043 erg/s - Type 2 Only narrow Emission lines, weaker in
optical continuum and X-rays LX gt 1041 erg/s
(observed) - Occasionally one type evolves into another over a
few years -- indicative of viewing along edge of
screen - Type 2 are 2 to 3 times more common than Type 1
27(No Transcript)
28 LIFETIMES OF SEYFERT GALAXIES
- About 1 of all Spirals are SEYFERTS, so
- Either 1 of all S's are always Seyferts OR
- 100 of S's are Seyferts for about 1 of the time
(MORE LIKELY active lifetimes 108 yr ) - OR 10 of S's are Seyferts for about 10 of the
time (or any other combination of fraction and
lifetime)
29A Seyfert and Variability
- Circinus, only 4 Mpc away 3C 84
30More About Seyferts
- Seyferts are usually weak radio emitters.
- CONCLUSIONS ABOUT SEYFERTS Fundamentally, they
are WEAKER QSOs - Type 1 we see the center more directly Type 2
dusty gas torus blocks view of the center and
more reradiated IR is seen
31BL Lacertae Objects
- NON-THERMAL SPECTRUM Radio through X-ray (and
gamma-ray) - Radiation strongly POLARIZED
- HIGHLY VARIABLE in ALL BANDS
- But (when discovered) NO REDSHIFT, so distances
unknown - Later, surrounding ELLIPTICAL galaxies found
- CONCLUSION greatly enhanced emission from the
AGN due to RELATIVISTIC BOOSTING of a JET
pointing very close to us. - BL Lacs OPTICALLY VIOLENTLY VARIABLE QUASARS
HIGHLY POLARIZED QUASARS ARE OFTEN CALLED BLAZARS
32Optical Monitoring Blazar Light Curve
33AGN CONTAIN SUPERMASSIVE BLACK HOLES (SMBHs)
- KEY LONGSTANDING ARGUMENTS
- ENERGETICS Powers up to 1048 erg/s (1041W) Even
at 100 efficiency would demand conversion of
about 18 M? /yr ( ) into energy. - Nuclear processes produce lt 1 efficiency.
- GRAVIATIONAL ENERGY via ACCRETION can produce
between 6 (non-rotating BH) and 32
(fastest-rotating BH),and the Luminosity is
crudely - L G MBH / R,
- with R the main distance from the Super Massive
Black Hole (SMBH) where mass is converted to
energy.
34Reminder Orbits around BHs
- GR gives rise to an effective potential which
yields orbits depending on the energy and angular
momentum of the matter near a BH - Once beyond about 50 Rs orbits are Newtonian
- Unlike Newtonian case we find an innermost stable
orbit at Rms3Rs 6GM/c2 for Schwarzschild BH
There is also the last possible, or
marginally bound, orbit at Rmb2Rs (where
accretion efficiency 0) - A pseudo-Newtonian potential ?GM/(r-RS)
reproduces the above results (Paczynski Wiita)
- If we look for orbiting photons, instead of
massive particles, there is a last stable orbit
at Rph1.5Rs
35Kerr(-Newman) Black Holes
- Rotating BH key results are the presence of a
static limit, inside of which one must co-rotate
with the BH - The horizon moves further inward the faster the
BH spins. This implies Rms and Rmb also move
inward. - The amount of binding energy that is extracted
from infalling matter goes up from lt0.06 to 0.42
m(c2)
Cosmic censorship hypothesis
a lt M so no naked singularities
exist
36Time Variability
- tVAR R / c
- tVAR 104 s ?
- R 3 x 1014 cm 10-4 pc
- For L 1047 erg/s,
- 10 M? /yr we get MBH 3 x 108 M? and RS
9 x 1013 cm - So, R 3 RS
- MUTUALLY CONSISTENT POWERS AND TIMESCALES.
37Big Blue Bump in QSO SED
- This peak is commonly seen in the blue/Near UV
(restframe) for quasars and is nicely modeled by
the quasi-thermal emission from a disk accreting
at substantial rates (T50,000 K) composite of
2200 (!) SDSS quasars (Vanden Berk et al 2001)
38 RECENT OBSERVATIONAL SUPPORT
- The Hubble Space Telescope has revealed that star
velocities rise to very high values close to
center of many galaxies and gas is orbiting
rapidly, e.g. M87, but dozens of cases now known - Disks have been seen via MASERS in some nearby
Seyfert AGN. - VLBI radio jets formed within 1 pc of center, as
seen earlier for M87.
39Rapidly Rotating Gas in M87 Nucleus
40Direct Evidence for Rotating Disk
Masers formed in warped disk in NGC 4258 (and a
few other Seyfert galaxies)
41Evidence for Supermassive Black Holes
NGC 4261 at core of radio emitting jets is a
clear disk 300 light-yrs across and knot of
emission near BH
42Similar Optical Microvariability in Radio Quiet
QSOs and Blazars?
- Lots of debate about RQQSOs some claimed fairly
frequent detections of INOV (e.g. de Deigo et al.
1998) others say no (e.g. Rabette et al. 1998
Romero et al. 1999) but temporal sampling and/or
sensitivity and/or comparison choices were
inadequate - We claim the first convincing evidence for such
optical INOV in true radio silent quasars
(Gopal-Krishna et al. 2003 Stalin et al.
2004a,b Sagar et al. 2004)
Observations mostly at
104cm telescope, Nainital, India - Both duty cycle and amplitude are lower in RQQSOs
than for blazars but differences between RQQSOs
and radio-loud quasars (and even low-polarization
core-dominated quasars) are small in our matched
sets of 6 or 7 of each type of AGN - Differences observed can arise from simple
Doppler boosting
43RQQSO INOV
44BL Lac INOV
45Radio-Loud Lobe Dominated Quasar INOV
46Comparison of RQQ and BL Lac INOV
- Duty cycles for low amplitude variations are very
similar, around 20 - High amplitude variations all BL Lac
47Comparison of CDQ and BL Lac INOV
- Low polarization CDQs have properties similar to
RQQs and LDQs, with duty cycles of 10-25
when observed for gt 4 hours - High polarization CDQ is similar to BL Lacs, with
duty cycles gt50
48Doppler Boosting Factors
- Typical INOV amplitude from blazar at small angle
is converted to lower amplitude and longer
timescale at larger viewing angles and would
appear just like RQQSO INOV?similar mechanism. - Is an optically emitting jet always present?
- Do disk perturbations get amplified in a jet?
49SMBH Model for AGN
50Most (all?) Galaxies Have Central SMBHs
Roughly, SMBH mass is 0.003 of the BULGE mass
for ellipticals, the bulge mass is the entire
star mass for most spirals, just a fraction. So
BH and galaxy probably grow up together. Better
correlation with bulge velocity dispersion or
perhaps galactic potential energy.
51Wide Span of SMBH Mass vs Galaxy Velocity
Dispersion
- Compiled by Greene Ho -- includes active and
inactive galaxies - MBH f R V2/G with f0.75 for spherical BLR
- RBLR ? L51000.64
- V from FWHM(H?)
- Best fit M ? ?3.65 for all while M ? ?4.02
for inactive only
52Unification through Orientation
- For Seyferts scattered BL and continuum can be
seen in polarized light for Type 2s (Antonucci
Miller) - For RGs quasars are shorter than similar powered
and redshifted FR IIs (Scheuer Barthel
Gopal-Krishna et al) - FR I RGs are statistically the parent population
of BL Lacs for the BL Lacs w/in a few degrees of
l-o-s (Padovani Urry)
53Seyferts and Unification
- Narrow line spectrum of Seyfert 2
- But, when polarized radiation observed, broad
lines, scattered by electrons are also visible - Also explains much lower x-ray and continuum in
Sy2
54UNIFIED MODELS FOR AGN
- Three main parameters MBH, , and viewing
angle to the BH and accretion disk axis, ? - Main ingredients
- SMBH gt 106 M?
- 10-5 pc lt accretion disk lt 10-1 pc (AD)
- broad line clouds lt 1 pc (BLR)
- thick, dusty, torus lt 100 pc
- narrow line clouds lt 1000 pc (NLR)
- sometimes, a JET (usually seen from lt 102 pc to
maybe 106 pc!)
55Unification for Radio Quiet and Radio Loud
- RADIO LOUD (Jets)
- High MBH,
- ? very small Optically Violently Variable Quasar
- ? small radio loud quasar (QSR)
- ? large classical double radio galaxy (FR II
type) - Low MBH.
- ? very small BL Lac object
- ? small broad line radio galaxy (FR I type)
- ? large narrow line radio galaxy
- RADIO QUIET
- High MBH,
- ? small QSO is seen including AD and BLR
- ? large only NLR plus radiating torus seen as
UltraLuminous InfraRed Galaxies (ULIRGs) - Low MBH,
- ? small Seyfert Type 1 ? big Seyfert Type 2
56Different AGN from Different Angles
If jets are important BL Lacs (and OVVs) along
jet axis, RLQSO at modest angles Radio Galaxies
at larger angles No jets Luminous Quasars seen
close to perpendicular to disk and Ultraluminous
Infrared Galaxies near disk plane Weaker Type 1
or Type 2 Seyferts
57Key Conclusions
- AGN make up a small fraction of galaxies at any
given time, though all may have undergone such a
phase when young - SMBHs provide the ultimate energy source for AGNs
(masses 106 to gt109M?) - The zoo of AGN types can be tamed through unified
schemes (though complications, such as critical
angle rising with central luminosity are probably
needed)