Title: Galactic Nuclei
1Galactic Nuclei
2Active Galactic Nucleus
- The centers of galaxies are found to be
- 1. a dense stellar cluster, with composite
stellar-type absorption and emission spectra - 2. extremely bright and compact nucleus,
sometimes brighter than the entire galaxy, with
non-stellar spectra - The second type are the AGN, up to 10 of all
galaxies, possibly an active phase of all
galaxies - AGN have strong, broad and rapidly variable
emission lines from hot gas the nuclei are a
few light-days across !
3Active Galactic Nuclei and Quasars
- Centers of galaxies are extremely bright and
active due to super-massive black holes at the
center - Emit light strongly in ALL wavelength bands,
from gamma rays and X-rays to Radio - The spectra do NOT look like that of stars
evidence of unusual non-stellar activity - Quasars Quasi-Stellar Radio Sources, appear
star-like owing to large distances and
red-shifted spectra - Hence QSOs were formed early in the Universe,
and are otherwise also active galactic nuclei
(AGN)
4Quasar
5Redshifted H Balmer Lines
6Redshift vs. speed (distance)
7Number of Quasars vs. Age
8AGN and Quasars
- There is considerable evidence of evolution
Quasars are early (high-z) versions of AGN,
before evolving into normal galaxies - AGN and quasars are thought to harbor
supermassive black holes that are the engines
which power the highly energetic activity leading
to extreme luminosities - Quasars are the most luminous objects in the
Universe (note that supernovae can be equally
luminous but are transient, and remain that
bright only for a few months at most)
9Quasars and host galaxies at same redshift
10AGN Seyfert Galaxies
- Spiral galaxies with bright compact nuclei
showing broad emission lines like quasars are
called Seyfert galaxies (after Carl Seyfert) - Broad emission lines are due to Doppler
broadening of light from gas clouds moving at
high velocities, about 10,000 Km/sec - Radiation from AGN and Quasars indicates a
plasma source with temperatures 100,000 to
millions of degrees (stars have temperatures much
less than 100,000 K) - How does the Black Hole power AGN and quasars ?
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12Blackbody Stellar vs. Non-thermal AGN Spectra
- Stellar spectra are that of a BB with peak
emission around in one wavelength region - AGN and Quasar spectra are non-thermal (non-BB),
with radiation flux decreasing monotonically with
frequency (energy), but remains significant at
all wavelengths
13Solar Radiation vs. Wavelength (Black Dots)
Spectral Fit to Blackbody at 5700 K (Solid Line)
14AGN Spectra Constant Radiation at All Wavelengths
15 Active Radio Galaxies
- Radio loud powerful radio sources
- - Low Power Radio galaxies
- - High Power Quasars
- Radio Quiet weak radio sources
- - Low Power Seyfert galaxies
- - High Power quasi-stellar radio
sources - Radio sources have associated jets of
relativistic particles synchrotron radiation
and radio lobes
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17Quasar 3C273 and Relativistic Jet
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19Radio lobes at endpoints of jets
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21Supermassive Black Hole ParadigmStructure of
AGN and Quasars
- Geometry of AGN/Quasars Black Hole surrounded
by an accretion disc, embedded in a torus
(doughnut shaped), with jet streams perpendicular
to the disc - High velocity clouds moving around, with Doppler
broadened emission lines - Orientation of disc determines our view
- - face on looking at the nucleus OR
- - edge-on view of the obscuring torus
- Most extreme Quasars BLAZARS (BL Lac
objects), viewing the jets end-on, no emission or
absorption lines, but surrounding elliptical
galaxies seen as fuzz
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27AGN Variability or Reverberation
- The luminosity of AGN often varies on a
time-scale of days ? the emitting nucleus must be
very compact size, only light-days across - Nuclear activity propagates all around within
days - Size 0.01 pc 10 light-days 1000 AU size
of the solar system (give or take a factor of 2) - AGN/Quasars emit light equal to an entire galaxy
from a region not much bigger than a stellar
system !
28Evolutionary Sequence of Galaxies
- Quasars are nuclei of active galaxies in the
distant past ultra-luminous, high-z objects - AGN are the link between quasars and normal
galaxies, activity continues to present day as
they evolve - Quasar/AGN activity fueled but a super-massive
black-hole (SMBH) engine
29Geometry and Physical Properties
- Observed image and spectral properties depend on
orientation - Obscuring torus hides the active nucleus and
black hole activity if seen edge-on, e.g.
narrow-line spectra similar to H II regions or
nebulae with low-velocity clouds - Face-on view reveals highly non-thermal
(non-stellar) spectra with broad emission lines