Quasar Structure from Microlensing in Gravitationally Lensed Quasars


Book Description

Abstract: I analyze microlensing in gravitationally lensed quasars to yield measurements of the structure of their continuum emission regions. I first describe our lensed quasar monitoring program and RETROCAM, the auxiliary port camera I built for the 2.4m Hiltner telescope to monitor lensed quasars. I describe the application of our Monte Carlo microlensing analysis technique to SDSS 0924+0219, a system with a highly anomalous optical flux ratio. For an inclination angle cos(i)=0.5, I find an optical scale radius log[r_s/cm] = 14.8"0.4. I extrapolate the best-fitting light curves into the future to find a roughly 45% probability that the anomalous image (D) will brighten by at least an order of magnitude during the next decade. I expand our method to make simultaneous estimates of the time delays and structure of HE1104-1805 and QJ0158-4325, two doubly-imaged quasars with microlensing and intrinsic variability on comparable time scales. For HE1104-1805, I find a time delay of Delta t_{AB} = 162"6 days and estimate a scale radius of log[r_s/cm] = 15.7"0.5 at 200 nm in the rest frame. I am unable to measure a time delay for QJ0158-4325, but the scale radius is log[r_s/cm] = 14.9"0.3 at 300 nm in the rest frame. then apply our Monte Carlo microlensing analysis technique to the optical light curves of 11 lensed quasar systems to show that quasar accretion disk sizes at 250 nm are strongly correlated with black hole mass. The resulting scaling relation is consistent with the expectation from thin disk theory, but it implies that black holes radiate with relatively low efficiency. These sizes are also larger, by a factor of approximately 3, than the size needed to produce the observed 800 nm quasar flux by thermal radiation from a thin disk with the same temperature profile. Finally, I analyze the microlensing of the X-ray and optical emission of the lensed quasar PG 1115+080. I find that the size of the X-ray emission region is approximately 1.3 dex smaller than that of the optical emission, and I find a weak trend supporting models with low stellar mass fractions near the lensed images.




Quasars at All Cosmic Epochs


Book Description

The last 50 years have seen a tremendous progress in the research on quasars. From a time when quasars were unforeseen oddities, we have come to a view that considers quasars as active galactic nuclei, with nuclear activity a coming-of-age experienced by most or all galaxies in their evolution. We have passed from a few tens of known quasars of the early 1970s to the 500,000 listed in the catalogue of the Data Release 14 of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Not surprisingly, accretion processes on the central black holes in the nuclei of galaxies — the key concept in our understanding of quasars and active nuclei in general — have gained an outstanding status in present-day astrophysics. Accretion produces a rich spectrum of phenomena in all bands of the electromagnetic spectrum. The power output of highly-accreting quasars has impressive effects on their host galaxies. All the improvement in telescope light gathering and in computing power notwithstanding, we still miss a clear connection between observational properties and theory for quasars, as provided, for example, by the H-R diagram for stars. We do not yet have a complete self-consistent view of nuclear activity with predictive power, as we do for main-sequence stellar sources. At the same time quasars offer many “windows open onto the unknown". On small scales, quasar properties depend on phenomena very close to the black hole event horizon. On large scales, quasars may effect evolution of host galaxies and their circum-galactic environments. Quasars’ potential to map the matter density of the Universe and help reconstruct the Universe’s spacetime geometry is still largely unexploited. The times are ripe for a critical assessment of our present knowledge of quasars as accreting black holes and of their evolution across the cosmic time. The foremost aim of this research topic is to review and contextualize the main observational scenarios following an empirical approach, to present and discuss the accretion scenario, and then to analyze how a closer connection between theory and observation can be achieved, identifying those aspects of our understanding that are still on a shaky terrain and are therefore uncertain knowledge. This research topic covers topics ranging from the nearest environment of the black hole, to the environment of the host galaxies of active nuclei, and to the quasars as markers of the large scale structure and of the geometry of spacetime of the Universe. The spatial domains encompass the accretion disk, the emission and absorption regions, circum-nuclear starbursts, the host galaxy and its interaction with other galaxies. Systematic attention is devoted to some key problems that remain outstanding and are clearly not yet solved: the existence of two quasar classes, radio quiet and radio loud, and in general, the systematic contextualization of quasar properties the properties of the central black hole, the dynamics of the accretion flow in the inner parsecs and the origin of the accretion matter, the quasars’ small and large scale environment, the feedback processes produced by the black hole into the host galaxy, quasar evolutionary patterns from seed black holes to the present-day Universe, and the use of quasars as cosmological standard candles. The timing is appropriate as we are now witnessing a growing body of results from major surveys in the optical, UV X, near and far IR, and radio spectral domains. Radio instrumentation has been upgraded to linear detector — a change that resembles the introduction of CCDs for optical astronomy — making it possible to study radio-quiet quasars at radio frequencies. Herschel and ALMA are especially suited to study the circum-nuclear star formation processes. The new generation of 3D magnetohydrodynamical models offers the prospective of a full physical modeling of the whole quasar emitting regions. At the same time, on the forefront of optical astronomy, applications of adaptive optics to long-slit spectroscopy is yielding unprecedented results on high redshift quasars. Other measurement techniques like 2D and photometric reverberation mapping are also yielding an unprecedented amount of data thanks to dedicated experiments and instruments. Thanks to the instrumental advances, ever growing computing power as well as the coming of age of statistical and analysis techniques, the smallest spatial scales are being probed at unprecedented resolution for wide samples of quasars. On large scales, feedback processes are going out of the realm of single-object studies and are entering into the domain of issues involving efficiency and prevalence over a broad range of cosmic epochs. The Research Topic "Quasars at all Cosmic Epochs" collects a large fraction of the contributions presented at a meeting held in Padova, sponsored jointly by the National Institute for Astrophysics, the Padova Astronomical Observatory, the Department of Physics and Astronomy of the University of Padova, and the Instito de Astrofísica de Andalucía (IAA) of the Consejo Superiór de Investigación Cientifica (CSIC). The meeting has been part of the events meant to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the foundation of the Padova Observatory.




Structure and Kinematics of Quasar Broad Line Regions


Book Description

Annotation Proceedings of a March 1998 meeting, with papers in sections on general considerations and photoionization modeling, profile variation and reverberation mapping, flows, disks, narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxies, the intermediate line region and lower-velocity gas, X-ray warm absorber and dust, and unified theories and connections with extended emission. Specific topics include spectral variability of NGC 4151 during 1990 and disk emission line issues. Lacks a subject index. The editor is associated with the University of Nebraska. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)




Formation of Structure in the Universe


Book Description

This advanced textbook provides an up-to-date and comprehensive introduction to the very active field of structure formation in cosmology. It is written by eleven world-leading authorities. Written in a clear and pedagogical style appropriate for graduate students in astronomy and physics, this textbook introduces the reader to a wide range of exciting topics in contemporary cosmology: from recent advances in redshift surveys, to the latest models in gravitational lensing and cosmological simulations. The authors are all world-renowned experts both for their research and teaching skills. In the fast-moving field of structure formation, this book provides advanced undergraduate and graduate students with a welcome textbook which unites the latest theory and observations.




Quasars and Cosmology


Book Description




Zooming in on Quasar Accretion Disks Using Chromatic Microlensing


Book Description

Observing the temperature profiles of accretion disks around black holes is a fundamental test of an important astrophysical process. However, angular resolution limitations have prevented such a measurement for distant quasars. We present a new method for determining the size of quasar accretion disks at a range of wavelengths, thus constraining their temperature profiles. The technique uses single-epoch, multi-wavelength optical and nearinfrared imaging of gravitationally lensed quasars in conjunction with X-ray imaging, and takes advantage of the presence of microlensing perturbations to the magnifications of the lensed images. The dependence of these perturbations on the angular size of the source, combined with the temperature structure of quasar accretion disks, causes the flux ratio anomalies due to microlensing to appear chromatic. This allows us to probe regions of the quasar that are too small to be measured by any other technique. We apply this method to observations of 12 lensed quasars, and measure the size of the accretion disk of each in 8 broadband filters between 0.36 and 2.2 microns (in the observed frame). We find that the overall sizes are larger by factors of 3 to 30 than predicted by the standard thin accretion disk model, and that the logarithmic slope of the wavelength-dependent size is ~ 0.2 on average, much shallower than the predicted slope of 4/3. This implies that the temperature is a steeper function of radius than the thin disk model predicts. With this new approach to determining quasar accretion disk sizes, we are thus able to rule out the standard thin disk model as the source of the (rest-frame) ultraviolet and optical continuum in these bright quasars.







Literature 1987, Part 1


Book Description

Astronomy and Astrophysics Abstracts aims to present a comprehensive documen tation of the literature concerning all aspects of astronomy, astrophysics, and their border fields. It is devoted to the recording, summarizing, and indexing of the relevant publications throughout the world. Astronomy and Astrophysics Abstracts is prepared by a special department of the Astronomisches Rechen-Institut under the auspices of the International Astronomical Union. Volume 43 records literature published in 1987 and received before August 15, 1987. Some older documents which we received late and which are not surveyed in earlier volumes are included too. We acknowledge with thanks contributions of our colleagues all over the world. We also express our gratitude to all organiza tions, observatories, and publishers which provide us with complimentary copies of their publications. Starting with Volume 33, all the recording, correction, and data processing work was done by means of computers. The recording was done by our technical staff members Ms. Helga Ballmann, Ms. Beate Gobel, Ms. Monika Kohl, Ms. Sylvia Matyssek, Ms. Doris Schmitz-Braunstein, Ms. Utta-Barbara Stegemann. Mr. Jochen Heidt and Mr. Kristopher Polzine supported our task by careful proof reading. It is a pleasure to thank them all for their encouragement. Heidelberg, October 1987 The Editors Contents Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Concordance Relation: PHYS-AAA 3 Abbreviations 5 Periodicals, Proceedings, Books, Activities 001 Periodicals . . . . . . . . . . . 10 002 Bibliographical Publications, Documentation, Catalogues, Data Bases 50 003 Books ...... .




Physics Briefs


Book Description