Title: Quasars and Active Galaxies
1Chapter 17
- Quasars and Active Galaxies
2Introduction
- Quasars, and the way in which they became
understood, have been one of the most exciting
stories of the last forty years of astronomy. - First noticed as seemingly peculiar stars,
quasars turned out to be some of the most
powerful objects in the Universe, and represent
violent forces at work. - We think that giant black holes, millions or even
billions of times the Suns mass, lurk at their
centers. - A quasar shines so brightly because its black
hole is pulling in the surrounding gas, causing
the gas to glow vividly before being swallowed.
3Introduction
- Our interest in quasars is further piqued because
many of them are among the most distant objects
we have ever detected in the Universe. - Since, as we look out, we are seeing light that
was emitted farther and farther back in time,
observing quasars is like using a time machine
that enables us to see the Universe when it was
very young. - We find that quasars were an early stage in the
evolution of large galaxies. - As time passed, gas in the central regions was
used up, and the quasars faded, becoming less
active. - Indeed, we see examples of active galaxies
relatively near us, and in some of these the
presence of a massive black hole has been all but
proven.
417.1 Active Galactic Nuclei
- The central regions of normal galaxies tend to
have large concentrations of stars. - For example, at infrared wavelengths we can see
through our Milky Way Galaxys dust and penetrate
to the center. - When we do so, we see that the bulge of our
Galaxy becomes more densely packed with stars as
we look closer to the nucleus. - With so many stars confined there in a small
volume, the nucleus itself is relatively bright. - This concentrated brightness appears to be a
natural consequence of galaxy formation gas
settles in the central region due to gravity, and
subsequently forms stars.
517.1 Active Galactic Nuclei
- In a minority of galaxies, however, the nucleus
is far brighter than usual at optical and
infrared wavelengths, when compared with other
galaxies at the same distance (see figure). - Indeed, when we compute the optical luminosity
(power) of the nucleus from its apparent
brightness and distance, we have trouble
explaining the result in terms of normal stars
It is difficult to cram so many stars into so
small a volume. - Such nuclei are also often very powerful at other
wavelengths, such as x-rays, ultraviolet, and
radio. - These galaxies are called active to distinguish
them from normal galaxies, and their luminous
centers are known as active galactic nuclei. - Clusters of ordinary stars rarely, if ever,
produce so much x-ray and radio radiation.
617.1 Active Galactic Nuclei
- Active galaxies that are extraordinarily bright
at radio wavelengths often exhibit two enormous
regions (known as lobes) of radio emission far
from the nucleus, up to a million light-years
away.
- The first radio galaxy of this type to be
detected, Cygnus A (see figure), emits about a
million times more energy in the radio region of
the spectrum than does the Milky Way Galaxy.
717.1 Active Galactic Nuclei
- Close scrutiny of such radio galaxies sometimes
reveals two long, narrow, oppositely directed
jets joining their nuclei and lobes (see
figure, left). - The jets are thought to consist of charged
particles moving at close to the speed of light
and emitting radio waves. - Sometimes radio galaxies appear rather peculiar
when we look at visible wavelengths, and the jet
is visible in x-rays, as in the case of Centaurus
A (see figure, middle and right).
817.1 Active Galactic Nuclei
- Optical spectra of the active nuclei often show
the presence of gas moving with speeds in excess
of 10,000 km /sec, far higher than in normal
galactic nuclei. - We measure these speeds from the spectra, which
have broad emission lines (see figure). - Atoms that are moving toward us emit photons that
are then blueshifted, while those that are moving
away from us emit photons that are then
redshifted, thereby broadening the line by the
Doppler effect. - Early in the 20th century, Carl Seyfert was the
first to systematically study galaxies with
unusually bright optical nuclei and peculiar
spectra, and in his honor they are often called
Seyfert galaxies.
917.1 Active Galactic Nuclei
- Although spectra show that gas has very high
speeds in supernovae as well, the overall
observed properties of active galactic nuclei
generally differ a lot from those of supernovae,
making it unlikely that stellar explosions are
responsible for such nuclei. - Indeed, it is difficult to see how stars of any
kind could produce the unusual activity. - However, for many years active galaxies were
largely ignored, and the nature of their central
powerhouse was unknown.
1017.2 Quasars Denizensof the Distant Past
- Interest in active galactic nuclei was renewed
with the discovery of quasars (shortened form of
quasi-stellar radio sources), the recognition
that quasars are similar to active galactic
nuclei, and the realization that both kinds of
objects must be powered by a strange process that
is unrelated to stars.
1117.2a The Discovery of Quasars
- In the late 1950s, as radio astronomy developed,
astronomers found that some celestial objects
emit strongly at radio wavelengths. - Catalogues of them were compiled, largely at
Cambridge University in England, where the method
of pinpointing radio sources was developed. - For example, the third such Cambridge catalogue
is known as 3C, and objects in it are given
numerical designations like 3C 48. - Although the precise locations of these objects
were difficult to determine with single-dish
radio telescopes (since they had poor angular
resolution), sometimes within the fuzzy radio
image there was an obvious probable optical
counterpart such as a supernova remnant or a very
peculiar galaxy. - More often, there seemed to be only a bunch of
stars in the fieldyet which of them might be
special could not be identified, and in any case
there was no known mechanism by which stars could
produce so much radio radiation.
1217.2a The Discovery of Quasars
- Special techniques were developed to pinpoint the
source of the radio waves in a few instances. - Specifically, the occultation (hiding) of 3C 273
by the Moon provided an unambiguous
identification with an optical star-like object. - When the radio source winked out, we knew that
the Moon had just covered it while moving slowly
across the background of stars. - Thus, we knew that 3C 273 was somewhere on a
curved line marking the front edge of the Moon. - When the radio source reappeared, we knew that
the Moon had just uncovered it, so it was
somewhere on a curved line marking the Moons
trailing edge at that time. - These two curves intersected at two points, and
hence 3C 273 must be at one of those points. - Though one point seemed to show nothing at all,
the other point was coincident with a bluish,
star-like object about 600 times fainter than the
naked-eye limit.
1317.2a The Discovery of Quasars
- When the positions of other radio sources were
determined accurately enough, it was found that
they, too, often coincided with faint,
bluish-looking stars (see figures). - These objects were dubbed quasi-stellar radio
sources, or quasars for short. - Optically they looked like stars, but stars were
known to be faint at radio wavelengths, so they
had to be something else.
1417.2a The Discovery of Quasars
- Object 3C 273 seemed to be especially
interesting A jet-like feature stuck out from
it, visible at optical wavelengths (see figures,
left and middle) and radio wavelengths (see
figure, right).
1517.2b Puzzling Spectra
- Several astronomers, including Maarten Schmidt of
Caltech, photographed the optical spectra of some
quasars with the 5-m (200-inch) Hale telescope at
the Palomar Observatory. - These spectra turned out to be bizarre, unlike
the spectra of normal stars. - They showed bright, broad emission lines, at
wavelengths that did not correspond to lines
emitted by laboratory gases at rest. - Moreover, different quasars had emission lines at
different wavelengths.
1617.2b Puzzling Spectra
- Schmidt made a breakthrough in 1963, when he
noticed that several of the emission lines
visible in the spectrum of 3C 273 had the pattern
of hydrogena series of lines with spacing
getting closer together toward shorter
wavelengthsthough not at the normal hydrogen
wavelengths (see figure). - He realized that he could simply be observing hot
hydrogen gas (with some contaminants to produce
the other lines) that was Doppler shifted.
- The required redshift would be huge, about 16
(that is, z ??/?0 0.16), corresponding to 16
of the speed of light (since z ? v/c, or v ? cz,
valid for z less than about 0.2).
1717.2b Puzzling Spectra
- This possibility had not been recognized because
nobody expected stars to have such large
redshifts. - Also, the spectral range then available to
astronomers, who took spectra on photographic
film, did not include the bright Balmer-a line of
hydrogen (that is, Ha), which is normally found
at 6563 Ã… but was shifted over to 7600 Ã… in 3C
273. - As soon as Schmidt announced his insight, the
spectra of other quasars were interpreted in the
same manner. - Indeed, one of Schmidts Caltech colleagues,
Jesse Greenstein, immediately realized that the
spectrum of quasar 3C 48 looked like that of
hydrogen redshifted by an even more astounding
amount 37.
1817.2b Puzzling Spectra
- Subsequent searches for blue stars revealed a
class of radio-quiet quasarstheir optical
spectra are similar to those of quasars, yet
their radio emission is weak or absent. - These are often called QSOs (quasi-stellar
objects), and they are about ten times more
numerous than radio-loud quasars. - Consistent with the common practice of using the
terms interchangeably, here we will simply use
quasar to mean either the radio-loud or
radio-quiet variety, unless we explicitly mention
the radio properties.
1917.2c The Nature of the Redshift
- How were the high redshifts produced?
- The Doppler effect is the most obvious
possibility. - But it seemed implausible that quasars were
discrete objects ejected like cannonballs from
the center of the Milky Way Galaxy (see figure)
their speeds were very high, and no good ejection
mechanism was known.
- Also, we would then expect some quasars to move
slightly across the sky relative to the stars,
since the Sun is not at the center of the Galaxy,
but such motions were not seen. - Even if these problems could be overcome, we
would then have to conclude that only the Milky
Way Galaxy (and not other galaxies) ejects
quasarsotherwise, we would have seen quasars
with blueshifted spectra, corresponding to those
objects emitted toward us from other galaxies.
2017.2c The Nature of the Redshift
- Similarly, there were solid arguments against a
gravitational redshift interpretation (recall
our discussion of this effect in Chapter 14), one
in which a very strong gravitational field causes
the emitted light to lose energy on its way out. - This possibility was completely ruled out later,
as we shall see. - If, instead, the redshifts of quasars are due to
the expansion of the Universe (as is the case for
normal galaxies), then quasars are receding with
enormous speeds and hence must be very distant. - Quasar 3C 273, for example, has z 0.16, so v ?
0.16c ? 48,000 km /sec. - According to Hubbles law, v H0d, so if H0 71
km /sec/Mpc, then d v/H0 (48,000 km /sec)/(71
km /sec/Mpc) ? 680 Mpc ? 2.2 billion
light-years, a sixth of the way back to the
origin of the Universe!
2117.2c The Nature of the Redshift
- A few galaxies with comparably high redshifts
(and therefore distances) had previously been
found, but they were fainter than 3C 273 by a
factor of 10 to 1000, and they looked fuzzy
(extended) rather than star-like. - Quasar 3C 273 turns out to be one of the closest
quasars. - Other quasars found during the 1960s had
redshifts of 0.2 to 1, and hence are billions of
light-years away. - Note that redshifts greater than 1 do not
necessarily imply speeds larger than the speed of
light, because the approximation z ? v/c is
reasonably accurate only when v/c is less than
about 0.2. - For higher speeds we may instead use the
relativistic Doppler formula to calculate the
nominal speed. - However, even calling it a Doppler effect is
misleading and, strictly speaking, incorrect The
redshift is produced by the expansion of space,
not by motion through space, and the concept of
speed then takes on a somewhat different
meaning.
2217.2c The Nature of the Redshift
- Similarly, as discussed in Chapter 16 for
galaxies, it makes more sense to refer to the
lookback time of a given quasar (the time it
has taken for light to reach us) than to its
distance v H0d is inaccurate at large redshifts
for a number of reasons. - The lookback time formula is complicated, but
some representative values are given in Table 16
1.
2317.2c The Nature of the Redshift
- A few dozen quasars with redshifts exceeding 6
have been discovered (see figures). - The highest redshift known for a quasar as of
late-2005 is z 6.4, which means that a feature
whose laboratory (rest) wavelength is 1000 Ã… is
observed to be at a wavelength 640 per cent
larger, or 1000 Ã… 6400 Ã… 7400 Ã…. (Recall that
z ??/?0 .) - The corresponding nominal speed of recession is
about 0.96c, and the quasars lookback time is
roughly 12.8 billion years (in a model where the
Universe is 13.7 billion years old). - We see the quasar as it was when the Universe was
about 6.6 per cent of its current age!
2417.2c The Nature of the Redshift
- How do we detect quasars?
- Many of them are found by looking for faint
objects with unusual colorsthat is, the relative
amounts of blue, green, and red light differ from
those of normal stars. - Low-redshift quasars tend to look bluish, because
they emit more blue light than typical stars. - But the light from high-redshift quasars is
shifted so much toward longer wavelengths that
these objects appear very red, especially since
intergalactic clouds of gas absorb much of the
blue light. - Quasars have also been found in maps of the sky
made with x-ray satellites, and of course with
ground-based radio surveys. - After finding a quasar candidate with any
technique, however, it is necessary to take a
spectrum in order to verify that it is really a
quasar and to measure its redshift. - As we have seen, the spectra of quasars are quite
distinctive, and are rarely confused with other
types of objects. - Tens of thousands of quasars are now known, and
more are being discovered very rapidly,
especially by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey.
2517.3 How Are Quasars Powered?
- Astronomers who conducted early studies of
quasars (mid-1960s) recognized that quasars are
very powerful, 10 to 1000 times brighter than a
galaxy at the same redshift. - But while galaxies looked extended in
photographs, quasars with redshifts comparable to
those of galaxies appeared to be mere points of
light, like stars. - Their diameters were therefore smaller than those
of galaxies, so their energy-production
efficiency must have been higher, already making
them unusual and intriguing.
2617.3a A Big Punch from a Tiny Volume
- However, these astronomers were in for a big
surprise when they figured out just how compact
quasars really are. - They noticed that some quasars vary in apparent
brightness over short timescalesdays, weeks,
months, or years (see figure).
- This implies that the emitting region is probably
smaller than a few light-days, light-weeks,
light-months, or light-years in diameter, in all
cases a far cry from the tens of thousands of
light-years for a typical galaxy.
2717.3a A Big Punch from a Tiny Volume
- The argument goes as follows Suppose we have a
glowing, spherical, opaque object that is 1
light-month in radius (see figure). - Even if all parts of the object brightened
instantaneously by an intrinsic factor of two, an
outside observer would see the object brighten
gradually over a timescale of 1 month, because
light from the near side of the object would
reach the observer 1 month earlier than light
from the edge. - Thus, the timescale of an observed variation sets
an upper limit (that is, a maximum value) to the
size of the emitting region The actual size must
be smaller than this upper limit.
2817.3a A Big Punch from a Tiny Volume
- Although this conclusion can be violated under
certain conditions (such as when different
regions of the object brighten in response to
light reaching them from other regions, creating
a domino effect), such models generally seem
unnatural. - Proper use of Einsteins special theory of
relativity (in case the light-emitting material
is moving very fast) can also change the derived
upper limit to some extent, but the basic
conclusion still holds Quasars are very small,
yet they release tremendous amounts of energy. - For example, a quasar only 1 light-month across
can be 100 times more powerful than an entire
galaxy of stars 100,000 light-years in diameter!
2917.3b What Is the Energy Source?
- The nature of the prodigious (yet physically
small) power source of quasars was initially a
mystery. - How does such a small region give off so much
energy? - After all, we dont expect huge explosions from
tiny firecrackers. - There was some indication that these objects
might be related to active galactic nuclei They
have similar optical spectra and are bright at
radio wavelengths. - So, perhaps the same mechanism might be used to
explain the unusual properties of both kinds of
objects. - In fact, maybe active galactic nuclei are just
low-power versions of quasars! - If so, quasars should be located in the centers
of galaxies. - Later we will see that this is indeed the case.
3017.3b What Is the Energy Source?
- The fact that the incredible power source of
quasars is very small immediately rules out some
possibilities. - Such a process of elimination is often useful in
astronomy recall, for instance, how we deduced
that pulsars are rapidly spinning neutron stars. - It turns out that for quasars, chemical energy is
woefully inadequate They cannot be wood on fire,
or even chemical explosives, because the most
powerful of these is insufficient to produce so
much energy within such a small volume. - Even nuclear energy, which works well for stars,
is not possible for the most powerful quasars. - They cannot be radiation from otherwise-unknown
supermassive stars or chains of supernovae going
off almost all the time, or other more exotic
stellar processes, because once again the
efficiency of nuclear energy production is not
high enough. - To produce that much nuclear energy, a larger
volume of material would be needed.
3117.3b What Is the Energy Source?
- The annihilation of matter and antimatter is
energetically feasible, since it is 100
efficient. - That is, all of the mass in a matterantimatter
collision gets turned into photons (radiation),
and in principle a very small volume can
therefore be tremendously powerful. - However, the observed properties of quasars do
not support this hypothesis. - Specifically, matterantimatter collisions tend
to emit excess amounts of radiation at certain
wavelengths, and this is not the case for
quasars.
3217.3b What Is the Energy Source?
- The release of gravitational energy, on the other
hand, can in some cases be very efficient, and
seemed most promising to several theorists
studying quasars in the mid-1960s. - We have already discussed how the gravitational
contraction of a ball of gas (a protostar), for
example, both heats the gas and radiates energy. - But to produce the prodigious power of quasars, a
very strong gravitational field is needed. - The conclusion was that a quasar is a
supermassive black hole, perhaps 10 million to a
billion times the mass of the Sun, in the process
of swallowing (accreting) gas. - The black hole is in the center of a galaxy.
- The rate at which matter can be swallowed, and
hence the power of the quasar, is proportional to
the mass of the blackhole, but it is typically a
few solar masses per year. - Although the Schwarzschild radius of, say, a 50
million solar-mass black hole is 150 million km,
this is just 1 A.U. (i.e., 8.3 light-minutes, the
distance between the Earth and the Sun), and
hence is minuscule compared with the radius of a
galaxy (many thousands of light-years).
3317.3c Accretion Disks and Jets
- The matter generally swirls around the black
hole, forming a rotating disk called an accretion
disk (see figure), a few hundred to a thousand
times larger than the Schwarzschild radius of the
black hole (and hence up to a few light-days to a
lightweek in size). - As the matter falls toward the black hole, it
gains speed (kinetic energy) at the expense of
its gravitational energy, just as a ball falling
toward the ground accelerates. - Compression of the gas particles in the accretion
disk to a small volume, and the resulting
friction between the particles, causes them to
heat up thus, they emit electromagnetic
radiation, thereby converting part of their
kinetic energy into light.
3417.3c Accretion Disks and Jets
- Note that energy is radiated before the matter is
swallowed by the black holenothing escapes from
within the black hole itself. - This process can convert the equivalent of about
10 of the rest-mass energy of matter into
radiation, more than 10 times more efficiently
than nuclear energy. (Recall from Chapter 11 that
the fusion of hydrogen to helium converts only
0.7 of the mass into energy.) - A spinning, very massive black hole is also
consistent with the well-focused jets of matter
and radiation that emerge from some quasars,
typically reaching distances of a few hundred
thousand light-years.
3517.3c Accretion Disks and Jets
- Again, no material actually comes from within the
black hole instead, its origin is the accretion
disk. - The charged particles in the jets are believed to
shoot out in a direction perpendicular to the
accretion disk, along the black holes axis of
rotation (see figure, top). - They emit radiation as they are accelerated.
- In addition to the radio radiation, high-energy
photons such as x-rays can also be produced (see
figure, bottom). - The impressive focusing might be provided by a
magnetic field, as in the case of pulsars, or by
the central cavity in the disk.
3617.3c Accretion Disks and Jets
- Recall that jets are also seen in some types of
active galaxies, which appear to be closely
related to quasars (see figure).
- As discussed in more detail later in this
chapter, we know that the particles move with
very high speeds because a jet can sometimes
appear to travel faster than the speed of
lightan effect that occurs only when an object
travels nearly along our line of sight, nearly at
the speed of light.
3717.3c Accretion Disks and Jets
- Recently, indirect evidence for accretion disks
surrounding a central, supermassive black hole
has been found in several active galaxies from
observations with various x-ray telescopes
(Japans ASCA, the European Space Agencys
XMM-Newton Mission, and NASAs Chandra X-ray
Observatory). - The specific shape of emission lines from highly
ionized iron atoms that must reside very close to
the galaxy center resembles that expected if the
light is coming from a rotating accretion disk. - Moreover, these lines exhibit a gravitational
redshiftthey appear at a somewhat longer
wavelength than expected from the recession speed
of the galaxy, because the photons lose some
energy (and hence get shifted to longer
wavelengths) as they climb out of the strong
gravitational field near the black hole (see
Chapter 14).
3817.3c Accretion Disks and Jets
- Similar emission lines have been seen in x-ray
binary systems in which the compact object is
likely to be a black hole (see the discussion in
Section 14.7). - Such lines, in both active galaxies and x-ray
binaries, are now being analyzed in detail to
detect and study predicted relativistic effects
such as the strong bending of light and the
dragging of spacetime around a rotating black
hole.
3917.4 What Are Quasars?
- The idea that quasars are energetic phenomena at
the centers of galaxies is now strongly supported
by observational evidence. - First of all, the observed properties of quasars
and active galactic nuclei are strikingly
similar. - In some cases, the active nucleus of a galaxy is
so bright that the rest of the galaxy is
difficult to detect because of contrast problems,
making the object look like a quasar (see
figures). - This is especially true if the galaxy is very
distant We see the bright nucleus as a
point-like object, while the spatially extended
outer parts (known as fuzz in this context) are
hard to detect because of their faintness and
because of blending with the nucleus.
4017.4 What Are Quasars?
- In the 1970s, a statistical test was carried out
with quasars. - A selection of quasars, sorted by redshift, was
carefully examined. Faint fuzz (presumably a
galaxy) was discovered around most of the quasars
with the smallest redshifts (the nearest ones), a
few of the quasars with intermediate redshifts,
and none of the quasars with the largest
redshifts (the most distant ones). - Astronomers concluded that the extended light was
too faint and too close to the nucleus in the
distant quasars, as expected. - In the 1980s, optical spectra of the fuzz in a
few nearby quasars revealed absorption lines due
to stars, but the vast majority of objects were
too faint for such observations. - In any case, the data strongly suggested that
quasars could indeed be extreme examples of
galaxies with bright nuclei.
4117.4 What Are Quasars?
- More recently, images obtained with the Hubble
Space Telescope demonstrate conclusively that
quasars live in galaxies, almost always at their
centers. - With a clear view of the skies above the Earths
atmosphere, and equipped with CCDs, the Hubble
Space Telescope easily separates the extended
galaxy light from the point-like quasar itself at
low redshifts. - In some cases the galaxy is obvious (see figures,
top and middle), but in others it is barely
visible, and special techniques are used to
reveal it recall, for example, 3C 273 in the
figures. - Further solidifying the association of quasars
with galaxies, recent ground-based optical
spectra of some relatively nearby quasars (z
0.20.3) show unambiguous stellar absorption
lines at the same redshift as that given by the
quasar emission lines (see figure, bottom).
4217.4 What Are Quasars?
- Quasars exist almost exclusively at high
redshifts and hence large distances. - The peak of the distribution is at z ? 2 (see
figures), though new studies at x-ray wavelengths
suggest that it might be at an even higher
redshift.
4317.4 What Are Quasars?
- With lookback times of about 10 billion years,
quasars must be denizens of the young Universe. - What happened to them?
- Quasars probably faded with time, as the central
black hole gobbled up most of the surrounding
gas the quasar shines only while it is pulling
in material. - Thus, some of the nearby active and normal
galaxies may have been luminous quasars in the
distant past, but now exhibit much less activity
because of a slower accretion rate. - Perhaps even the nucleus of the Milky Way Galaxy,
which is only slightly active, was more powerful
in the past, when the putative black hole had
plenty of material to accrete. - Of course, many of the weakly active galaxies we
see nearby were probably never luminous enough to
be genuine quasars. - Either their central black hole wasnt
sufficiently massive to pull in much material, or
there was little gas available to be swallowed.
4417.4 What Are Quasars?
- Though most quasars are very far away, some have
relatively low redshifts (like 0.1). - If quasars were formed early in the Universe, how
can these quasars still be shining? - Why hasnt all of the gas in the central region
been used up? - High-resolution images (see figures) show that in
many cases, the galaxy containing the quasar is
interacting or merging with another galaxy. - This result suggests that gravitational tugs end
up directing a fresh supply of gas from the outer
part of the galaxy (or from the intruder galaxy)
toward its central black hole, thereby fueling
the quasar and allowing it to continue radiating
so strongly. - Some quasars may have even faded for a while, and
then the interaction with another galaxy
rejuvenated the activity in the nucleus.
4517.4 What Are Quasars?
- Adaptive optics is now allowing high-resolution
imaging from mountaintop observatories in
addition to the Hubble Space Telescope. - An image with adaptive optics on the Gemini North
telescope has enabled the central quasar peak of
brightness to be subtracted from the overall
image. - A flat edge-on disk, interpreted to be the host
galaxy, was revealed (see figures).
4617.5 Are We Being Fooled?
- A few astronomers have disputed the conclusion
that the redshifts of quasars indicate large
distances, partly because of the implied
enormously high luminosity produced in a small
volume. - If Hubbles law doesnt apply to quasars, maybe
they are actually quite nearby.
- Specifically, Halton Arp has found some cases
where a quasar seems associated with an object of
a different, lower redshift (see figure).
4717.5 Are We Being Fooled?
- However, most astronomers blame the association
on chance superposition. - There could also be some amplification of the
brightnesses of distant quasars, along the line
of sight, by the gravitational field of the
low-redshift object this would produce an
apparent excess of quasars around such objects. - We now have little reason to doubt the
conventional interpretation of quasar redshifts
(though of course as scientists we should keep an
open mind). - Quasars clearly reside in the centers of galaxies
having the same redshift. - They are simply the more luminous cousins of
active galactic nuclei, and a plausible energy
source has been found. - In addition, gravitational lensing shows that
quasars are indeed very distant.
4817.6 Finding Supermassive Black Holes
- We argued above, essentially by the process of
elimination, that the central engine of a quasar
or active galaxy consists of a supermassive black
hole swallowing material from its surroundings,
generally from an accretion disk. - Is there any more direct evidence for this?
- Well, the high speed of gas in quasars and active
galactic nuclei, as measured from the widths of
emission lines, suggests the presence of a
supermassive black hole. - A strong gravitational field causes the gas
particles to move very quickly, and the different
emitted photons are Doppler shifted by different
amounts, resulting in a broad line. - On the other hand, alternative explanations such
as supernovae might conceivably be possible
they, too, produce high-speed gas, but without
having to use a supermassive black hole.
4917.6 Finding Supermassive Black Holes
- Recently, however, very rapidly rotating disks of
gas have been found in the centers of several
mildly active galaxies. - Their motion is almost certainly produced by the
gravitational attraction of a compact central
object, because we see the expected decrease of
orbital speed with increasing distance from the
center, as in Keplers laws for the Solar System.
- The galaxy NGC 4258 (see figure) presents the
most convincing case, one in which radio
observations were used to obtain very accurate
measurements. - The typical speed is v 1120 km /sec at a
distance of only 0.4 light-year from the center. - The data imply a mass of about 3.6 ? 107 solar
masses in the nucleus.
5017.6 Finding Supermassive Black Holes
- The corresponding density is over 100 million
solar masses per cubic light-year, a truly
astonishing number. - If the mass consisted of stars, there would be no
way to pack them into such a small volume, at
least not for a reasonable amount of time They
would rapidly collide and destroy themselves, or
undergo catastrophic collapse. - The natural conclusion is that a supermassive
black hole lurks in the center. - Indeed, this is now regarded as the most
conservative explanation for the data If its
not a black hole, its something even stranger!
5117.6 Finding Supermassive Black Holes
- One of the most massive black holes ever found is
that of M87, an active galaxy in the Virgo
Cluster that sports a bright radio and optical
jet (see figures).
5217.6 Finding Supermassive Black Holes
- Spectra of the gas disk surrounding the nucleus
were obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope
(see figure), and the derived mass in the nucleus
is about 3 billion solar masses.
5317.6 Finding Supermassive Black Holes
- If some nearby, relatively normal-looking
galaxies were luminous quasars in the past, and a
significant fraction even show some activity now,
we suspect that supermassiveblack holes are
likely to exist in the centers of many large
galaxies today. - Sure enough, when detailed spectra of the nuclear
regions of a few galaxies were obtained
(especially with the Hubble Space Telescope),
strong evidence was found for rapidly moving
stars. - The masses derived from Keplers third law were
once again in the range of a million to a billion
Suns. - By late-2005, the central regions of several
dozen galaxies had been observed in this manner,
revealing the presence of supermassive black
holes.
5417.6 Finding Supermassive Black Holes
- Probably the most impressive and compelling case
is our own Milky Way Galaxy. - As we discussed in Chapter 15, stars in the
highly obscured nucleus were seen from Earth at
infrared wavelengths, and their motions were
measured over the course of a few years see the
top figure. - The data are consistent with stars orbiting a
single, massive, central dark object (see figure,
bottom). - The implied mass of this object is 3.7 million
solar masses, and it is confined to a volume only
0.03 light-year in diameter! - The only known explanation is a black hole.
- Thus, our Galaxy could certainly have been more
active in the past, though never as powerful as
the most luminous quasars, which require a black
hole of 108 to 109 solar masses.
5517.6 Finding Supermassive Black Holes
- In the past few years, it has been found that the
mass of the central black hole is proportional to
the mass of the bulge in a spiral galaxy, or to
the total mass of an elliptical galaxy (see
figure on the next slide). - But recall from Chapter 16 that the bulges of
spiral galaxies are old, as are elliptical
galaxies (which resemble the bulges of spiral
galaxies). - Thus, there is evidence that the formation of the
supermassive black hole is related to the
earliest stages of formation of galaxies. - We dont yet understand this relation, but
clearly it offers a clue to physical processes
long ago, when most galaxies were being born. - Very recent studies show that for a given bulge
mass, the more compact the bulge, the more
massive the black hole, suggesting an even closer
link between bulge formation and black-hole
formation.
5617.6 Finding Supermassive Black Holes
5717.7 The Effects of Beaming
- Radio observations with extremely high angular
resolution, generally obtained with the technique
of very-long-baseline interferometry, have shown
that some quasars consist of a few small
components. - In many cases, observations over a few years
reveal that the components are apparently
separating very fast (see figures), given the
conversion from the angular change in position we
measure across the sky to the actual physical
speed in km /sec at the distance of the quasar. - Indeed, some of the components appear to be
separating at superluminal speedsthat is, at
speeds greater than that of light! - But Einsteins special theory of relativity says
that no objects can travel through space faster
than light, an apparent contradiction.
5817.7 The Effects of Beaming
- Astronomers can explain how the components only
appear to be separating at greater than the speed
of light even though they are actually physically
moving at allowable speeds (less than that of
light). - If one of the components is a jet approaching us
almost along our line of sight, and nearly at the
speed of light, then according to our perspective
the jet is nearly keeping up with the radiation
it emits (see figure).
5917.7 The Effects of Beaming
- If the jet moves a certain distance in our
direction in (say) 5 years, the radiation it
emits at the end of that period gets to us sooner
than it would have if the jet were not moving
toward us. - So in fewer than 5 years, we see the jets motion
over 5 full years. - In the interval between our observations, the jet
had several times longer to move than we would
naively think it had. - So it could, without exceeding the speed of
light, appear to move several times as far. - Whether a given object looks like a quasar or a
less-active galaxy with broad emission lines
probably depends on the orientation of the jet
relative to our line of sight Jets pointing at
us appear far brighter than those that are
misaligned. - Thus, quasars are probably often beamed roughly
toward us, a conclusion supported by the fact
that many radio-loud quasars show superluminal
motion.
6017.7 The Effects of Beaming
- However, if the jet is pointing straight at us,
it can greatly outshine the emission lines, and
the objects optical spectrum looks rather
featureless, unlike that of a normal quasar. - It is then called a BL Lac object, after the
prototype in the constellation Lacerta, the
Lizard.
- At the other extreme, if the jet is close to the
plane of the sky, dust and gas in a torus
(doughnut) surrounding the central region may
hide the active nucleus from us (see figure). - The galaxy nucleus itself may then appear
relatively normal, although the active nature of
the galaxy could still be deduced from the
presence of extended radio emission from the jet.
6117.7 The Effects of Beaming
- This general idea of beamed, or directed,
radiation probably accounts for many of the
differences seen among active galactic nuclei. - For example, in one type of Seyfert galaxy, the
very broad emission lines are not easily visible,
despite other evidence that indicates
considerable activity in the nucleus. (For
example, bright narrow emission lines can be
seen.) - We think that in some cases, the broad emission
lines are present, but simply cant be directly
seen because they are being blocked by an
obscuring torus of material (see figure).
- But light from the broad lines can still escape
along the axis of this torus and reflect off of
clouds of gas elsewhere in the galaxy. - Observations of these clouds then reveal the
broad lines, but faintly.
6217.7 The Effects of Beaming
- Similarly, some galaxies hardly show any sort of
active nucleus directlyit is too heavily blocked
from view by gas and dust along our line of
sight, in the central torus. - However, radiation escaping along the axis of
this torus can still light up exposed parts of
the galaxy, indirectly revealing the active
nucleus (see figure).
6317.8 Probes of the Universe
- Quasars are powerful beacons, allowing us to
probe the amount and nature of intervening
material at high redshifts. - For example, numerous narrow absorption lines are
seen in the spectra of high-redshift quasars (see
figures).
- These spectral lines are produced by clouds of
gas at different redshifts between the quasar and
us. - The lines can be identified with hydrogen,
carbon, magnesium, and other elements.
6417.8 Probes of the Universe
- Analysis of the line strengths and redshifts
allows us to explore the chemical evolution of
galaxies, the distribution and physical
properties of intergalactic clouds of gas, and
other interesting problems. - The lines are produced by objects that are
generally too faint to be detected in other ways.
- One surprising conclusion is that all of the
clouds have at least a small quantity of elements
heavier than helium. - Since stars and supernovae produced these heavy
elements, the implication is that an early
episode of star formation preceded the formation
of galaxies.
6517.8 Probes of the Universe
- Another way in which quasars are probes of the
Universe is the phenomenon of gravitational
lensing of light (Chapter 16). - In fact, such lensing was first confirmed through
studies of quasars. - In 1979, two quasars were discovered close
together in the sky, only a few seconds of arc
apart (see figure, left). - They had the same redshift, yet their spectra
were essentially identical, arguing against a
possible binary quasar. - A cluster of galaxies with one main galaxy (see
figure, middle and right) was subsequently found
along the same line of sight, but at a smaller
redshift.
6617.8 Probes of the Universe
- The most probable explanation is that light from
the quasar is bent by the gravity of the cluster
(warped spacetime), leading to the formation of
two distinct images (see figure). - The cluster is acting like a gravitational lens.
6717.8 Probes of the Universe
- Since then, dozens of gravitationally lensed
quasars have been found. - For a point lens and an exactly aligned object,
we can get an image that is a ring centered on
the lensing object. - Such a case is called an Einstein ring, and a
few are known (see figure).
6817.8 Probes of the Universe
- Some gravitationally lensed quasars have
quadruple quasar images that resemble a cross
(see figures, left), or even more complicated
configurations (see figures, right). - Only gravitational lensing seems to be a
reasonable explanation of these objects, the
redshifts of whose components are identical.
6917.8 Probes of the Universe
- Moreover, in some cases continual monitoring of
the brightness of each quasar image has revealed
the same pattern of light variability, but with a
time delay between the different quasar images. - This delay occurs because the light travels along
two different paths of unequal length to form the
two quasar images see figure. - The variability pattern is not expected to be
identical in two entirely different quasars that
happen to be bound in a physical pair. - The multiple imaging of quasars is an exciting
verification of a prediction of Einsteins
general theory of relativity. - The lensing details are sensitive to the total
amount and distribution of matter (both visible
and dark) in the intervening cluster. - Thus, gravitationally lensed quasars provide a
powerful way to study dark matter.