Top Banner
Joseph F. Hennawi UC Berkeley & OSU October 3, 2007 Xavier Prochaska (UCSC) Quasars Probing Quasars Probing Quasars Quasars
19

Joseph F. Hennawi UC Berkeley & OSU October 3, 2007 Xavier Prochaska (UCSC) Quasars Probing Quasars.

Dec 20, 2015

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Joseph F. Hennawi UC Berkeley & OSU October 3, 2007 Xavier Prochaska (UCSC) Quasars Probing Quasars.

Joseph F. HennawiUC Berkeley

&

OSUOctober 3, 2007

Xavier Prochaska(UCSC)

Quasars Probing QuasarsQuasars Probing QuasarsQuasars Probing QuasarsQuasars Probing Quasars

Page 2: Joseph F. Hennawi UC Berkeley & OSU October 3, 2007 Xavier Prochaska (UCSC) Quasars Probing Quasars.

A Simple ObservationA Simple Observation

Spectrum from Wallace Sargent

Page 3: Joseph F. Hennawi UC Berkeley & OSU October 3, 2007 Xavier Prochaska (UCSC) Quasars Probing Quasars.

The Basic PictureThe Basic Picture

HI cloud

Line-of-Sight

QSO

Transverse

b/g QSO

f/g QSOR||

R

HI cloud

• Ly absorption can probe 8 decades in NHI (Ly is large!).

• Neighboring sightline provides a another view of the QSO.

• Redshift space distortions from kT motions (~ 20 km/s ) smooth with Gaussian of Rprop ~ 60 kpc = 10” @ z = 2.

• Need projected QSO pairs to study small scales!

Page 4: Joseph F. Hennawi UC Berkeley & OSU October 3, 2007 Xavier Prochaska (UCSC) Quasars Probing Quasars.

What Can Proximity Effects Teach Us?

What Can Proximity Effects Teach Us?

• How is HI distributed around quasars?

• What is the quasar duty cycle tQSO/tH ?• What is the obscured fraction (1- Ω/4)?

• Can we constrain episodic QSO variability, tburst?

• Directly observe impact of AGN feedback on the IGM?

nQSO(> L) :

tQSO

tH

Ω4

⎛⎝⎜

⎞⎠⎟nHost/Relics(> ?) ;

Ω4π

=nQSO

nQSO + nobscured

Physics of IGM well understood no sub-grid physics or semi-analytical recipes!

Page 5: Joseph F. Hennawi UC Berkeley & OSU October 3, 2007 Xavier Prochaska (UCSC) Quasars Probing Quasars.

Mining Large SurveysMining Large SurveysApache Point Observatory (APO) • Spectroscopic QSO survey

– 5000 deg2

– 45,000 z < 2.2; i < 19.1– 5,000 z > 3; i < 20.2– Precise (u,g,r, i, z) photometry

• Photometric QSO sample– 8000 deg2

– 500,000 z < 3; i < 21.0– 20,000 z > 3; i < 21.0 – Richards et al. 2004; Hennawi et al. 2006

SDSS 2.5m

ARC 3.5m

Jim Gunn

Follow up QSO pair confirmation

from ARC 3.5m and MMT 6.5m

MMT 6.5m

Page 6: Joseph F. Hennawi UC Berkeley & OSU October 3, 2007 Xavier Prochaska (UCSC) Quasars Probing Quasars.

= 3.7”

2’55”

ExcludedArea

Finding Quasar PairsFinding Quasar Pairs

SDSS QSO @ z =3.13

4.02.0

3.0

2.03.0

3.0

2.04.0

low-zQSOs

f/g QSO z = 2.29

b/g QSO z = 3.13

Keck LRIS spectra (Å)

Page 7: Joseph F. Hennawi UC Berkeley & OSU October 3, 2007 Xavier Prochaska (UCSC) Quasars Probing Quasars.

Cosmology with Quasar PairsCosmology with Quasar PairsClose Quasar Pair Survey

• Discovered > 100 sub-Mpc pairs (z > 2) • Factor 25 increase in number known• Moderate & Echelle Resolution Spectra• Near-IR Foreground QSO Redshifts• About 50 Keck & Gemni nights.

= 13.8”, z = 3.00; Beam =79 kpc/h

Spectra from Keck ESI

Keck Gemini-N

Science• Dark energy at z > 2 from AP test

• Small scale structure of Ly forest

• Thermal history of the Universe

• Topology of metal enrichment from

• Transverse proximity effects

Gemini-S

Collaborators: Jason Prochaska, Crystal Martin, Sara Ellison, George Djorgovski, Scott Burles

Ly Forest Correlations

CIV Metal Line Correlations

Nor

mal

ized

Flu

x

Page 8: Joseph F. Hennawi UC Berkeley & OSU October 3, 2007 Xavier Prochaska (UCSC) Quasars Probing Quasars.

Quasar Absorption LinesQuasar Absorption Lines

DLA (HST/STIS)

Moller et al. (2003)

LLS

Nobody et al. (200?)

Lyz = 2.96

Lyman Limitz = 2.96

QSO z = 3.0 LLS

Lyz = 2.58

DLA

• Ly Forest– Optically thin diffuse IGM / ~ 1-10; 1014 < NHI < 1017.2

– well studied for R > 1 Mpc/h

• Lyman Limit Systems (LLSs)– Optically thick 912 > 1

– 1017.2 < NHI < 1020.3

– almost totally unexplored

• Damped Ly Systems (DLAs)– NHI > 1020.3 comparable to disks

– sub-L galaxies?

– Dominate HI content of Universe

Page 9: Joseph F. Hennawi UC Berkeley & OSU October 3, 2007 Xavier Prochaska (UCSC) Quasars Probing Quasars.

Self Shielding: A Local ExampleSelf Shielding: A Local Example

Sharp edges of galaxy disks set by ionization equilibrium with the UV background. HI is ‘self-shielded’ from extragalactic UV photons.

Braun & Thilker (2004)M31 (Andromeda) M33 VLA 21cm map

DLA

Ly forest

LLS

What if the MBH = 3107 M black hole at Andromeda’s center started accreting at the Eddington limit? What would M33 look like then?

bump due

to M33

Average HI of Andromeda

Page 10: Joseph F. Hennawi UC Berkeley & OSU October 3, 2007 Xavier Prochaska (UCSC) Quasars Probing Quasars.

Neutral Gas

Isolated QSO

Proximity EffectsProximity Effects

• Proximity Effect Decrease in Ly forest absorption due to large ionizing flux near a quasar

• Transverse Proximity Effect Decrease in absorption in background QSO spectrum due to transverse ionizing flux of a foreground quasar– Geometry of quasar radiation field (obscuration?)

– Quasar lifetime/variability

– Measure distribution of HI in quasar environments

Are there similar effects for optically thick absorbers?

Ionized Gas

Projected QSO Pair

nQSO :

tQSO

tH

Ω4

⎛⎝⎜

⎞⎠⎟nHosts

Page 11: Joseph F. Hennawi UC Berkeley & OSU October 3, 2007 Xavier Prochaska (UCSC) Quasars Probing Quasars.

Transverse Optically ThickTransverse Optically Thick

Hennawi, Prochaska, et al. (2007)

zbg = 3.13; zfg= 2.29; R = 22 kpc/h; logNHI = 20.5

zbg = 2.07; zfg= 1.98; R = 139 kpc/h; logNHI = 19.0

zbg = 2.21; zfg= 2.18; R = 61 kpc/h; logNHI = 18.5

zbg = 2.53; zfg= 2.43; R = 78 kpc/h; logNHI = 19.7

zbg = 2.35; zfg= 2.28; R = 37 kpc/h; logNHI = 18.9

zbg = 2.17; zfg= 2.11; R = 97 kpc/h; logNHI = 20.3

Page 12: Joseph F. Hennawi UC Berkeley & OSU October 3, 2007 Xavier Prochaska (UCSC) Quasars Probing Quasars.

Transverse Optically Thick Clustering

Transverse Optically Thick ClusteringHennawi, Prochaska et al. (2007);

Hennawi & Prochaska (2007)

= Keck = Gemini = SDSS

= has absorber = no absorber

En

han

cem

ent

over

UV

Bz

(re

dsh

ift)

= 2.0 = 1.6

QSO-LBG

• 29 new QSO-LLSs with R < 2 Mpc/h

• High covering factor for R < 100 kpc/h

• For T(r) = (r/rT)-, = 1.6, log NHI > 19

rT = 9 1.7 Mpc/h (3 QSO-LBG)

Page 13: Joseph F. Hennawi UC Berkeley & OSU October 3, 2007 Xavier Prochaska (UCSC) Quasars Probing Quasars.

Line-of-Sight ClusteringLine-of-Sight Clustering

Prochaska, Hennawi, & Herbert-Fort (2007)

• Factor 5-10 fewer PDLAs then expected from transverse clustering.

• Transverse clustering strength at z = 2.5 predicts that ~ 90% of QSO’s should

have an absorber with NHI > 1019 cm-2 along the LOS??

• Rapid redshift evolution of QSO clustering compared to paucity of proximate

DLAs implies that photoevaporation has to be occurring.

Transverse prediction

1 +

||(

∆v)

z

Line-of-Sight Clustering Strength

Extrapolation of trans. predictions

Line-of-sight measurements

Proximate DLA DLA within v < 3000 km/s

Page 14: Joseph F. Hennawi UC Berkeley & OSU October 3, 2007 Xavier Prochaska (UCSC) Quasars Probing Quasars.

PhotoevaporationPhotoevaporation

f/g QSO

b/g QSO

R

QSO is to DLA . . . as . . . O-star is to interstellar cloud

Γ =nphotons

nH

= 2.6 ×10−4S56RMpc-2 n−1

H, -1

Hennawi & Prochaska (2007a)

δ =trect IF

= 500ΓNH

1020.3cm-2

⎛⎝⎜

⎞⎠⎟

−1

< 1

Otherwise it is photoevaporatedBertoldi (1989), Bertodi & McKee (1989)

Cloud survives provided

r = 17r = 19r = 21

nH = 0.1

log NHI = 20.3

Page 15: Joseph F. Hennawi UC Berkeley & OSU October 3, 2007 Xavier Prochaska (UCSC) Quasars Probing Quasars.

Emission AnisotropyEmission AnisotropyObscuration/Beaming

f/g QSO

b/g QSO

Absorber

R

Ω > 104 yr

• Episodic Variability QSO’s vary significantly on timescale

t < tcross ~ 4 105 yr @ = 20” (120 kpc/h).

Current best limit is tburst > 104 yr.

Episodic Variability

f/g QSO

b/g QSO

Absorber

We observe light emitted at time t = t0

Ionization state of gas depends on QSO at time t = t0 - R/c R

t = t0

Page 16: Joseph F. Hennawi UC Berkeley & OSU October 3, 2007 Xavier Prochaska (UCSC) Quasars Probing Quasars.

• Optically Thick LLSs and DLAs (today’s talk)

– Nature of absorbers near QSO’s is unclear.

• Gas entrained from AGN driven outflow? (AGN feedback!)

• Absorption from nearby dwarf galaxies?

– To measure tQSO/tH or (Ω/4) we need to model

absorbers and do radiative transfer (hard).

• Optically Thin Ly Forest (in progess)

– Best for constraining tQSO/tH and (Ω/4).

– Why? Because we can predict the Ly forest

fluctuations ab initio from N-body simulations (easy).

Proximity Effects: Thick and ThinProximity Effects: Thick and Thin

Page 17: Joseph F. Hennawi UC Berkeley & OSU October 3, 2007 Xavier Prochaska (UCSC) Quasars Probing Quasars.

Optically Thin (Sneak Preview)Optically Thin (Sneak Preview)Hennawi, et al. (2007), in prep

= Gemini

= accurate z = no accurate z

En

han

cem

ent

over

UV

Bz

(re

dsh

ift)

Sample

• 1.6 < z < 4.5; 20 kpc < R < 10 Mpc

• 59 pairs with gUV > 100.

• 30 accurate near-IR redshifts.

(

m)

, , = Keck , = SDSS

gUV ≡1+FQSO

FUVB

; ′Lyα = τ Lyα gUV

z = 2.4360z = 44 km/s

Gemini NIRI K-band spectrum

Page 18: Joseph F. Hennawi UC Berkeley & OSU October 3, 2007 Xavier Prochaska (UCSC) Quasars Probing Quasars.

Transverse Proximity Effect?Transverse Proximity Effect?

z = 3.8135

z = 44 km/s

zbg = 4.11, zfg= 3.81

= 34”, R = 175 kpc/h

tcross = 5.7107 yr

gUV = 626!

with f/g QSO

without f/g QSO

RealReal

SimulatedSimulated

Hennawi et al. 2007, in prep.

Gemini NIRI K-band spectrumSpectrum from Keck ESI

Page 19: Joseph F. Hennawi UC Berkeley & OSU October 3, 2007 Xavier Prochaska (UCSC) Quasars Probing Quasars.

SummarySummary• With projected pairs, QSO environments can be probed

down to ~ 20 kpc where ionizing flux is ~ 104 times the UVB.

• Clustering of optically thick absorbers around QSOs is highly anisotropic.

• Paucity of PDLAs implies photoevaporation has to occur.

• Physical arguments indicate DLAs < 1 Mpc from a QSO can

be photoevaporated.

• There is a LOS optically thick proximity effect but no transverse one.

• Either QSOs emit anisotropically or are variable on timescales < 106 yr.

• The optically thin proximity effect will distinguish between these two possibility and yield new quantitative constraints.