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Looking for a Color-Luminosity Relationship for AGN July 16, 2013 prepared by Varoujan Gorjian

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CM4SY. Looking for a Color-Luminosity Relationship for AGN July 16, 2013 prepared by Varoujan Gorjian NITARP Scientist. An Image of the sky is essentially 2D. How Can we tell how far things are?. There is one way to get relative distance. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Looking for a Color-Luminosity Relationship for AGN July 16, 2013 prepared by Varoujan Gorjian NITARP Scientist CM4SY
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Page 1: Looking for a Color-Luminosity Relationship for AGN July 16, 2013 prepared by Varoujan Gorjian

Looking for a Color-Luminosity Relationship for AGN

July 16, 2013prepared by

Varoujan GorjianNITARP Scientist

CM4SY

Page 2: Looking for a Color-Luminosity Relationship for AGN July 16, 2013 prepared by Varoujan Gorjian

An Image of the sky is essentially 2D

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Page 3: Looking for a Color-Luminosity Relationship for AGN July 16, 2013 prepared by Varoujan Gorjian

How Can we tell how far things are?

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Page 4: Looking for a Color-Luminosity Relationship for AGN July 16, 2013 prepared by Varoujan Gorjian

There is one way to get relative distance

• Thanks to the Hubble law we can separate based on redshift:

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V=HoD

Page 5: Looking for a Color-Luminosity Relationship for AGN July 16, 2013 prepared by Varoujan Gorjian

But which clusters are near andwhich ones are far?

• Thanks to the Hubble law we can separate based on redshift:

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V=HoD

Page 6: Looking for a Color-Luminosity Relationship for AGN July 16, 2013 prepared by Varoujan Gorjian

An Image of the sky is essentially 2D

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Page 7: Looking for a Color-Luminosity Relationship for AGN July 16, 2013 prepared by Varoujan Gorjian

The equivalent of a volcanic islandis an Active Galactic Nucleus (AGN)

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Page 8: Looking for a Color-Luminosity Relationship for AGN July 16, 2013 prepared by Varoujan Gorjian

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Quasars which are also Active Galactic Nuclei but more Luminous

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Seyfert galaxiesare less luminous thanQuasars and so don’t outshine their galaxies.

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Our model foran Active Galactic Nucleus (AGN)

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Page 14: Looking for a Color-Luminosity Relationship for AGN July 16, 2013 prepared by Varoujan Gorjian

Spectrum of AGNBlue Excess (AKA Big Blue Bump)

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Page 16: Looking for a Color-Luminosity Relationship for AGN July 16, 2013 prepared by Varoujan Gorjian

• But how do we figure out how far away quasar is?

• One way is to figure out its inherent luminosity and then compare it to its apparent luminosity because light follows the inverse square law:

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BRIGHTNESS =LUMINOSITY

24×π ×DISTANCE

Page 17: Looking for a Color-Luminosity Relationship for AGN July 16, 2013 prepared by Varoujan Gorjian

• This has been a very successful way of determining the distances to stars

• How do we figure out the luminosity of a star?• This is the results of the Hertzsprung-Russell Diagram which relates

the color of a star to it’s luminosity (also known as absolute magnitude)

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Page 18: Looking for a Color-Luminosity Relationship for AGN July 16, 2013 prepared by Varoujan Gorjian

Color Magnitude Diagram

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Page 19: Looking for a Color-Luminosity Relationship for AGN July 16, 2013 prepared by Varoujan Gorjian

• Why does this work?

• It’s based on simple physics of hot gasses:– Fusion creates energy at the core of a star– The energy then heats the outer gas layers of the star– What does heat have to do with luminosity?

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Page 20: Looking for a Color-Luminosity Relationship for AGN July 16, 2013 prepared by Varoujan Gorjian

Black Body Radiation

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The hotter something is, it emits more light.

Page 21: Looking for a Color-Luminosity Relationship for AGN July 16, 2013 prepared by Varoujan Gorjian

• Why does this work?

• It’s based on simple physics of hot gasses:– Fusion creates energy at the core of a star– The energy then heats the outer layers of the star– What does heat have to do with luminosity?

– SO THE MORE MASSIVE A STAR IS, IT HAS MORE FUSION AND GENERATES MORE ENERGY AND HEATS UP THE OUTER LAYERS OF A STAR MORE AND SO CREATES A MORE LUMINOUS STAR BECAUSE OF BLACK BODY RADIATION

Now how does that relate to the color of a star?

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Page 22: Looking for a Color-Luminosity Relationship for AGN July 16, 2013 prepared by Varoujan Gorjian

Color

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Tran

smis

sion

→Wavelength →

Page 23: Looking for a Color-Luminosity Relationship for AGN July 16, 2013 prepared by Varoujan Gorjian

Color

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This is KPNO R band.Note that it’s not a “Top hat” function, but it’s trying.Note also that none of it is perfectly transparent!

Filter Transmission

Page 24: Looking for a Color-Luminosity Relationship for AGN July 16, 2013 prepared by Varoujan Gorjian

Color

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The hotter something is, it emits more more short wavelength light

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Color

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So what temperature are these galaxies?


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