Introduction and Motivation

Similar documents
Gas Masses and Gas Fractions: Applications of the Kennicutt- Schmidt Law at High Redshift

Alaina Henry Goddard Space Flight Center

Test #1! Test #2! Test #2: Results!

Rest-frame Optical Spectra: A Window into Galaxy Formation at z~2

Two Main Techniques. I: Star-forming Galaxies

Star Formation Indicators

Stellar Populations: Resolved vs. unresolved

Hunting for Infrared Signatures of Supermassive Black Hole Activity in Dwarf Galaxies

High Redshift Universe

High-redshift galaxies

Understanding Lyα Emission Using LBGs (and vice versa)

A Local Clue to the Reionization of the Universe

High-Redshift Galaxies - Exploring Galaxy Evolution - Populations - Current Redshift Frontier

Hunting for Monsters. Selecting and Characterizing Obscured Quasars with WISE Kevin Hainline Hidden Monsters Dartmouth College August 2016

Empirical Evidence for AGN Feedback

arxiv:astro-ph/ v1 18 Apr 2006

Multi-wavelength ISM diagnostics in high redshift galaxies

Outline: Part II. The end of the dark ages. Structure formation. Merging cold dark matter halos. First stars z t Univ Myr.

Probing the End of Dark Ages with High-redshift Quasars. Xiaohui Fan University of Arizona Dec 14, 2004

9. Evolution with redshift - z > 1.5. Selection in the rest-frame UV

Lyα-Emitting Galaxies at z=3.1: L* Progenitors Experiencing Rapid Star Formation

Chien-Ting Chen! Dartmouth College

Lya as a Probe of the (High-z) Universe

Quasars and AGN. What are quasars and how do they differ from galaxies? What powers AGN s. Jets and outflows from QSOs and AGNs

Stars, Galaxies & the Universe Lecture Outline

Interpreting Galaxies across Cosmic Time with Binary Population Synthesis Models

Galaxies Across Cosmic Time

Active Galaxies & Emission Line Diagnostics

The Stellar Populations of Galaxies H. W. Rix IMPRS Galaxies Course March 11, 2011

Galaxies 626. Lecture 9 Metals (2) and the history of star formation from optical/uv observations

Gas Accretion & Outflows from Redshift z~1 Galaxies

INVESTIGATING Hα, UV, AND IR STAR-FORMATION RATE DIAGNOSTICS FOR A LARGE SAMPLE OF z 2 GALAXIES

High-Redshift Galaxies: A brief summary

Radio Quiet AGN: Black Hole & Host Galaxy Proper;es

A Multi-Wavelength Census of Star Formation at Redshift z~2. Naveen A. Reddy

The The largest assembly ESO high-redshift. Lidia Tasca & VUDS collaboration

Survey of dusty AGNs based on the mid-infrared all-sky survey catalog. Shinki Oyabu (Nagoya University) & MSAGN team

STAR FORMATION RATES observational overview. Ulrike Kuchner

Thus Far. Intro / Some Definitions Hubble Classification Components of Galaxies. Specific Galaxy Types Star Formation Clusters of Galaxies

Galaxies 626. Lecture 8 The universal metals

A Monster at any other Epoch:

Benjamin Weiner Steward Observatory November 15, 2009 Research Interests

Tracing the growth history of the active BH population with the black hole mass function

Multi-wavelength Surveys for AGN & AGN Variability. Vicki Sarajedini University of Florida

Orianne ROOS CEA-Saclay Collaborators : F. Bournaud, J. Gabor, S. Juneau

Observing the Formation of Dense Stellar Nuclei at Low and High Redshift (?) Roderik Overzier Max-Planck-Institute for Astrophysics

Quasars ASTR 2120 Sarazin. Quintuple Gravitational Lens Quasar

Physical properties of high-z star-forming galaxies with FMOS-COSMOS

Active Galactic Nuclei

- AGN feedback in action?

Luminous radio-loud AGN: triggering and (positive?) feedback

The Cosmic History of Star Formation. James Dunlop Institute for Astronomy, University of Edinburgh

arxiv: v2 [astro-ph.co] 19 Jan 2010

ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI: optical spectroscopy. From AGN classification to Black Hole mass estimation

Active Galactic Nuclei - Zoology

Astr 2320 Thurs. April 27, 2017 Today s Topics. Chapter 21: Active Galaxies and Quasars

X-ray emission from star-forming galaxies

Age Dating A SSP. Quick quiz: please write down a 3 sentence explanation of why these plots look like they do.

Spectral Energy Distribution of galaxies

Vivienne Wild. Timing the starburst AGN connection

The Massive Hosts of Radio Galaxies Across Cosmic Time

Galaxies 626. Lecture 5

Resolved Spectroscopy of Adolescent and Infant Galaxies (1 < z < 10) July 18, 2014 TMT Science Forum, Tucson

In a dense region all roads lead to a black Hole (Rees 1984 ARAA) Deriving the Mass of SuperMassive Black Holes

Wagg ea. [CII] in ALMA SV 20min, 16 ants. 334GHz. SMA 20hrs

Active Galactic Nuclei

Extragalactic Astronomy

High-Redshift Galaxies at the Epoch of Cosmic Reionization

Gas in and around z > 2 galaxies

Active galactic nuclei (AGN)

Chapter 10: Unresolved Stellar Populations

Black Holes and Active Galactic Nuclei

The First Galaxies. Erik Zackrisson. Department of Astronomy Stockholm University

Feeding the Beast. Chris Impey (University of Arizona)

Bursty stellar populations and AGN in bulges

The History of Active Galaxies A.Barger, P. Capak, L. Cowie, RFM, A. Steffen, and Y. Yang

Science with the Intermediate Layer

Investigating the connection between LyC and Lyα emission and other indirect indicators

Hunting for feeding and feedback signatures in a sample of hard X-ray selected NLS1

Ionization, excitation, and abundance ratios in z~2-3 star-forming galaxies with KBSS-MOSFIRE

AST Cosmology and extragalactic astronomy. Lecture 20. Black Holes Part II

DLAs Probing Quasar Host Galaxies. Hayley Finley P. Petitjean, P. Noterdaeme, I. Pâris + SDSS III BOSS Collaboration 2013 A&A

Simulating high-redshift galaxies

arxiv:astro-ph/ v1 23 Sep 2003

Observations of galaxy evolution. Pieter van Dokkum

Emission lines in star-forming galaxies

IRS Spectroscopy of z~2 Galaxies

The Monster Roars: AGN Feedback & Co-Evolution with Galaxies

A zoo of transient sources. (c)2017 van Putten 1

Lecture 11: SDSS Sources at Other Wavelengths: From X rays to radio. Astr 598: Astronomy with SDSS

The Ṁass- loss of Red Supergiants

The bolometric output of AGN in the XMM-COSMOS survey

Outline. Walls, Filaments, Voids. Cosmic epochs. Jeans length I. Jeans length II. Cosmology AS7009, 2008 Lecture 10. λ =

Age = Gyr dependent on the detail physics.

Observational evidence for AGN feedback throughout the cosmic epochs. Roberto Maiolino

Observations of High-Redshift Galaxies and What Can Be Inferred from Them. Alice Shapley (UCLA)

Our Galaxy. We are located in the disk of our galaxy and this is why the disk appears as a band of stars across the sky.

Interstellar Dust and Extinction

Active Galactic Nuclei SEDs as a function of type and luminosity

Formation and Evolution of Planetary Systems

Transcription:

1

Introduction and Motivation This last two days at this conference, we ve focused on two large questions regarding the role that AGNs play in galaxy evolution: My research focuses on exploring these questions at z ~ 2 3. 2

Introduction and Motivation Wall et al. (2005) Star formation rate density and QSO space density Why z ~ 2 3? At this redshift range, both star formation and AGN activity were at a peak in the universe. What can we say about the AGNs that are hosted by galaxies undergoing the bulk of the total star formation at this epoch? What types of galaxies host AGNs at this redshift range? How does the presence of an AGN influence gas kinematics and star formation?

Introduction and Motivation LBG MD BX BM BM BX Steidel et al. (2004) LBG Steidel et al. (2004) The objects that comprise the UVselected AGN sample were initially selected using UGR colors to be in the redshift range of z ~ 1.0 3.5 (LBGs and BX/BM objects). 4

Introduction and Motivation Rest-frame UV spectra for the LBGs has been used to examine gas kinematics for these objects. The LBGs have strong star-formation (SFRs ~ 10 1000 M sun yr -1 ), with ubiquitous outflows ( >100 km s -1, Shapley et al. 2003, Steidel et al. 2010) The Lyman-Break galaxy samples acts as an ideal highredshift non-active control sample in order to decouple the effects of an AGN and starformation. Steidel et al. (2010) 5

UV-Selected AGNs at z ~ 2 3 Q2343-BX333 z = 2.397 The AGNs were selected by virtue of strong UV emission features. The sample consists of 33 UV-selected z~2-3 Type II AGN, expanded from an initial sample of 16 Type II AGN at z~3 (Steidel et al. 2002) Based on clustering analysis in Steidel et al. (2002), the UV-selected narrow-line AGNs are though to be hosted by the equivalent of LBGs. AGNs non-agns 2 3 4 Redshift Multi-wavelength data set: - Optical magnitudes (Steidel et al. 2003, 2004, Reddy et al. 2006) - Near-IR coverage in J and K - Spitzer IRAC coverage in the [3.6], [4.5], [5.8] and [8.0] µm bands for 11 objects. - Rest-frame UV Spectra (Steidel et al. 2002) - Rest-frame optical spectra for a subset of the objects. (Erb et al. 2006) 6

Rest-Frame UV Composite Spectrum Hainline et al. (2011) - The rest-frame UV contains many emission and absorption features that are useful in tracing gas kinematics. - LRIS spectra for the objects in our AGN sample were shifted to the rest-frame and coadded to create a high signal-to-noise composite spectrum. 7

Rest-Frame UV Composite Spectrum Hainline et al. (2011) The UV composite spectrum shows a much redder slope when compared to the non-agn LBG composite from Shapley et al. (2003). Absorption line strength is inversely correlated to Ly- EW, which can be understood if the escape of Ly-α photons is at least partially modified by the covering fraction of neutral gas in the ISM. 8

Rest-Frame UV Composite Spectrum Hainline et al. (2011) (Non-AGN composite spectrum from Shapley et al. 2003) The Si IV λ1393 feature has a -180 km s -1 offset in the non-agn spectrum. The feature has a -845 ± 171 km s -1 offset in the AGN spectrum. 9

In collaboration with Alice Shapley, Jenny Greene, Charles Steidel, Naveen Reddy, and Dawn Erb locally High- redshift R-K Kauffmann et al. (2003) Log(M star / M sun ) Kriek et al. (2007) z ~ 2.3 AGNs U - B (AB) Local AGNs are preferentially found in massive, bulge dominated galaxies. Recent results suggest that active galaxies at higher-redshift reside in massive galaxies with intermediate colors. 1.5 1.0 0.5 2.0 < z < 2.8 Rosario et al. (2011) AGNs Log(M star / M sun ) Log(M star / M sun ) 10

- Large R-K colors, as compared to the R-K colors from a sample of z~2-3 non active galaxies, imply large stellar masses, older stellar ages, and/or more dust extinction for the AGN hosts. - The AGN fraction in LBGs is around ~3%. R-K - In order to understand the origin of this difference in R-K color, and see what types of galaxies host AGNs at high-redshift, we performed stellar population synthesis modeling on the UV-selected AGNs. 11

Assef et al. (2010) Dust emission Total Stellar Model AGN We used stellar population synthesis modeling to understand the host galaxy populations of the UVselected AGNs. observed wavelength (µm) The 11 IRAC AGNs were modeled using both a stellar population model and an AGN template. 12

Constant Star formation 13

We can infer AGN properties for the IRAC AGNs from our dual-component modeling: - Accretion Rate M = L bol /ε rad c 2 <M>= 0.3 M yr 1 - Black Hole Masses Using the Haring and Rix (2004) and Merloni et al. (2010) relations, <log(m BH /M )> = 8.36 - Eddington Ratios λ Edd = L bol /L edd Median λ Edd = 0.03 The UV-selected AGNs are accreting at significantly sub-eddington rates, indicating that they must have done much of their growth in the past. 14

AGNs non-agn LBGs Stern et al. (2005) Donley et al. (2012) The IRAC AGNs span the full range of power-law slopes, and are a representative subsample of the entire population of UV-selected AGNs. We apply the results from modeling the IRAC AGNs with dual-component modeling to the UV-selected AGNs without IRAC coverage. 15

AGN Sample For constant starformation, the average host galaxy properties: <E(B-V)> = 0.22 <Age> = 1548 Myr <SFR> = 63 M sun /yr <log(mass/m sun )> = 10.85 Chabrier IMF 16

UV selected AGN Sample For constant starformation, the average host galaxy specific star formation rate: Mainieri et al. (2011) <ssfr> = 0.85 Gyr -1 17

AGN Sample non-agn Sample UGR-selected, same redshift range, no UV emission features, and fit in the same way as the non-irac AGNs. Mass-Matched non- AGN Sample For each AGN, we chose six non-agns with the same stellar mass to form a comparison sample. The z~2-3 star-forming galaxies show a blue sequence, and the AGNs exist in similarly-colored galaxies as the non-agns matched in stellar mass. 18

Observed AGN Fraction 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 AGN Sample non-agn Sample Mass-Matched non- AGN Sample 10 11 12 Log(M * /M sun ) The AGN host galaxies have indistinguishable properties to those of a mass-matched nonactive sample. 19

The UV continuum of the AGN UV composite is predominantly starlight, and the red slope is due to high levels of extinction. 20

We created composite UV spectra after separating the AGN spectra into two bins by mass. The EW for the AGN emission lines are shown to be strongly dependent on stellar mass. 21

The EW and the extinctioncorrected line luminosities for the AGN emission lines are larger in higher mass host galaxies. 22

We estimated the CIV luminosity for galaxies below 10 10 M sun under the assumption that emission line luminosity traces AGN luminosity, and scales linearly with stellar mass. Our results indicate that CIV would be too weak to be detected in lower mass galaxies. We can explain the mass segregation of the UV-selected AGNs if, at z~2-3: 1. There is a constant Eddington ratio distribution 2. M BH is proportional to M The segregation of UV-selected AGNs in high-mass hosts suggests that M BH and M are already correlated at z > 2, during the epoch when both bulges and black holes are actively growing. 23

Conclusions & Summary The rest-frame UV composite spectrum for our AGN sample shows several emission lines characteristic of AGNs, as well as interstellar absorption features detected in star-forming LBGs. The UV continuum slope of the composite spectrum is significantly redder than that of a sample of non-agn UV-selected star-forming galaxies. Blueshifted SiIV absorption provides evidence for outflowing highly ionized gas in these objects at speeds of ~10 3 km s -1, quantitatively different from what is seen in the outflows of non-agn LBGs. The host galaxies for the UV-selected AGNs have high masses, older stellar ages, and higher SFRs on average than what is measured for the full sample of non-active star-forming galaxies, but similar U-V colors, SFRs, stellar ages, and E(B-V) values to those derived for a mass-matched non-agn control sample. We estimated that CIV emission would not be detectable in galaxies below 10 10 M sun, assuming a constant Eddington ratio and a correlation between black hole mass and stellar mass at z > 2. Alternatively, the low-mass galaxies lack supermassive BHs, or are radiating at significantly lower Eddington ratios. 24