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Physical Sciences and Mathematics Commons

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Astrophysics and Astronomy

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Aerospace, Physics, and Space Science Faculty Publications

Series

2010

Galaxies: Fundamental Parameters

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Hubble Space Telescope Near-Infrared Snapshot Survey Of 3cr Radio Source Counterparts. Iii. Radio Galaxies And Quasars In Context, David J.E. Floyd, David Axon, Stefi Baum, Alessandro Capetti, Marco Chiaberge, Juan P. Madrid, Christopher P. O'Dea, Eric S. Perlman, William B. Sparks Apr 2010

Hubble Space Telescope Near-Infrared Snapshot Survey Of 3cr Radio Source Counterparts. Iii. Radio Galaxies And Quasars In Context, David J.E. Floyd, David Axon, Stefi Baum, Alessandro Capetti, Marco Chiaberge, Juan P. Madrid, Christopher P. O'Dea, Eric S. Perlman, William B. Sparks

Aerospace, Physics, and Space Science Faculty Publications

We compare the near-infrared (NIR) H-band photometric and morphological properties of low-z (z < 0.3) 3CR radio galaxies with samples of BL Lac objects and quasar host galaxies, merger remnants, quiescent elliptical galaxies, and brightest cluster galaxies drawn from the literature. In general, the 3CR host galaxies are consistent with luminous (~Lsstarf) elliptical galaxies. The vast majority of FR II's (~80%) occupy the most massive ellipticals and form a homogeneous population that is comparable to the population of radio-loud quasar (RLQ) host galaxies in the literature. However, a significant minority (~20%) of the 3CR FR II's appears under-luminous with respect to quasar host galaxies. All FR II objects in this faint tail are either unusually red, or appear to be the brightest objects within a group. We discuss the apparent differences between the radio galaxy and RLQ host galaxy populations. RLQs appear to require gsim1011 M☉ host galaxies (and ~109 M☉ black holes), whereas radio galaxies and radio-quiet quasars can exist in galaxies down to ~3 × 1010 M☉. This may be due to biases in the measured quasar host galaxy luminosities or populations studied, or due to a genuine difference in host galaxy. If due to a genuine difference, it would support the idea that radio and optical active galactic nuclei are two separate populations with a significant overlap.


The M•–Σ* Relation Derived From Sphere Of Influence Arguments, Daniel P. Batcheldor Mar 2010

The M•–Σ* Relation Derived From Sphere Of Influence Arguments, Daniel P. Batcheldor

Aerospace, Physics, and Space Science Faculty Publications

The observed relation between supermassive black hole (SMBH) mass (M•) and bulge stellar velocity dispersion (σ*) is described by log M• = α + βlog(σ*/200 km s-1). As this relation has important implications for models of galaxy and SMBH formation and evolution, there continues to be great interest in adding to the M• catalog. The "sphere of influence" (ri) argument uses spatial resolution to exclude some M• estimates and pre-select additional galaxies for further SMBH studies. This Letter quantifies the effects of applying the ri argument to a population of galaxies and SMBHs that do not follow the M•–σ* relation. …