Sign on

SAO/NASA ADS Astronomy Abstract Service


· Find Similar Abstracts (with default settings below)
· Electronic On-line Article (HTML)
· Also-Read Articles (Reads History)
·
· Translate This Page
Title:
Extragalactic X-ray surveys of ULXs and AGNs
Authors:
Winter, Lisa M.
Affiliation:
AA(University of Maryland, College Park)
Publication:
Proquest Dissertations And Theses 2008. Section 0117, Part 0606 362 pages; [Ph.D. dissertation].United States -- Maryland: University of Maryland, College Park; 2008. Publication Number: AAT 3324916. Source: DAI-B 69/08, Feb 2009
Publication Date:
00/2008
Origin:
UMI
Keywords:
Active galactic nuclei, Ultraluminous X-ray sources
Comment:
Publication Number: AAT 3324916; ISBN: 9780549781752; Advisor: Reynolds, Christopher S., Mushotzky, Richard F.
Bibliographic Code:
2008PhDT........10W

Abstract

Extragalactic X-ray studies provide unique opportunities for studying accreting black holes. In particular, they are necessary for studying phenomena not easily selected or observed in other wavelengths. Among these objects, ultraluminous X-ray sources (ULXs) emit the vast majority of their luminosity in the X-ray band and are very faint or confused in other wavebands. Similarly, heavily obscured active galactic nuclei (AGN) with absorbing columns > 10^24 cm -2 are rarely detected in optical surveys, due to the extreme reddening. In my thesis, I study both phenomenon in the local universe.

At ULX luminosities [L X (0.3 - 10 keV) > 3=D710 39 erg s -1 ], the European Space Agency's XMM-Newton satellite provides the spectral resolution and sensitivity necessary to study the population of local ULXs. Thus, we conducted an XMM-Newton archival study of a complete sample of the ULXs located within 8Mpc. Our study confirmed key predictions of the intermediatemass black hole (IMBH) hypothesis for local ULXs. We then followed-up this study by investigating high signal-to-noise XMM-Newton observations of 14 ULX sources-- studying their spectral shape, testing the validity of different accretion disk and power law models, and then using absorption of their spectra to measure the oxygen and iron abundances of the interstellar medium of their host galaxies.

New breakthroughs are expected in the study of heavily obscured AGN from SWIFT. The SWIFT satellite, launched in 2004, has detected a sample of 153 AGN with the Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) in the first 9-months of data. The BAT is sensitive in the 14-195 keV band and the selected sources have an average red- shift of [approximate] 0.03. Thus, it detects local AGN without bias towards all but the most obscured sources ( n H > 10 24 atoms cm -2 ). The BAT AGN sources are the result of an all-sky survey with a flux limit of F BAT > 10 -11 erg s -1 cm -2 . I analyze and present the results of X-ray data from XMM- Newton, ASCA, as well as SWIFT's XRT (0.3-10 keV) and BAT, in order to understand the properties of obscured and unobscured AGN in the local universe. Among our results, we show that the new class of "hidden"/buried AGN are a significant population of local AGN ([approximate] 20%). We also find that our data supports the need for a modified AGN unified model--one which includes a luminosity dependence.


Bibtex entry for this abstract   Preferred format for this abstract (see Preferences)

   

Find Similar Abstracts:

Use: Authors
Title
Keywords (in text query field)
Abstract Text
Return: Query Results Return    items starting with number
Query Form
Database: Astronomy
Physics
arXiv e-prints