1 / 22

Measuring the properties of QSO broad-line regions with the GMOS IFU.

Measuring the properties of QSO broad-line regions with the GMOS IFU. Randall Wayth with Matt O'Dowd & Rachel Webster. Outline. Motivation Introduction to 2237+0305 Observations & Data reduction Emission line flux ratios Microlensing of QSO emission regions

dolores
Download Presentation

Measuring the properties of QSO broad-line regions with the GMOS IFU.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Measuring the properties of QSO broad-line regions with the GMOS IFU. Randall Wayth withMatt O'Dowd & Rachel Webster.

  2. Outline • Motivation • Introduction to 2237+0305 • Observations & Data reduction • Emission line flux ratios • Microlensing of QSO emission regions • Constraints on emitting region size

  3. Motivation - QSO emission regions • QSO continuum/line emission regions are too small to resolve • Reverberation mapping suggests they are very small • Gravitational lensing magnifies objects. If a source is resolved in a lensed image, then we can directly determine its true size & surface brightness • If not resolved, then microlensing should create different magnifications for the continuum and broad-line regions of the QSO.

  4. 2237+0305 • Barred spiral (Sbc) galaxy at low redshift (z=0.04) lensing z=1.69 radio quiet QSO. • Four images of QSO formed around galaxy bulge with separation ~1-2 arcsec • Lensing offers unique opportunity to study • QSO continuum and emission line region size/structure • Properties of dark matter halo (shape, cuspiness, clumpiness) • Mass function of galaxy bulge stars, and more...

  5. 2237+0305 N E 15 second r-band acquisition image

  6. 2237+0305 Same image, different contrast

  7. 2237+0305 Galaxy centre B D C A QSO image labels follow Yee (1988)

  8. Is the CIII] emission region in 2237+0305 resolved? • Mediavilla et al. (1998) claimed seeing an arc of resolved CIII] emission using INTEGRAL IFU on WHT. (0.5” separation, rectangular array, 0.45” fibre diameter) • If real, we can “undo” the effects of lensing and create a true image of the emission region. From Mediavilla et al. (1998) ApJ 503 L27

  9. Sky Object Data - GMOS IFU • IFU is a hexagonal lenslet array with separation 0.2” • R400 grating in “one slit” mode. Useful wavelength range ~500-850nm. Object coverage is 5”x3”. • 8 x 30min exposures taken on 16/17 July, 2002. We use 5 of the 8 frames. Seeing 0.6”

  10. Aims • Confirm/refute existence of arc of emission • If real, make an image of the QSO BELR! • If not real, examine effect of lensing on the relative strengths of continuum and broad-line emission from the QSO

  11. Data CIII] QSO spectrum MgII D A B C Galaxy spectrum

  12. Line flux extraction CIII] line MgII line Continuum

  13. Images of the broad-line flux • Subtracting surrounding continuum from the emission lines leaves the line flux • Subtraction is quite clean • Notice difference in brightness of QSO images Arc or PSF overlap? MgII – emission line CIII] continuum MgII continuum CIII] - emission line

  14. PSF modelling & subtraction • We are looking for a faint arc, so we need to create an accurate PSF and subtract the QSO images. • Method • combine line images for the 5 good frames • define a mask around each QSO image including a region which is uncontaminated by other images • cut out, rescale and combine sections from each image • use this PSF, to subtract QSO images, iterate a few times

  15. PSF model Combined PSF (MgII) Uncontaminated regions

  16. Line images with QSOs subtracted MgII CIII] Unresolved! - No arc in MgII or CIII]! Peak residual ~10%

  17. Microlensing and the BELR • Microlensing by stars in the lens galaxy's bulge project a network of “caustics” onto the QSO. • Parts of the source crossing caustics (red/yellow) are highly magnified. • The QSO can be differentially magnified depending on its size relative to the caustic network. Microlensing caustic network Image courtesy Joachim Wambsganss

  18. Microlensing and the BELR • Small source = no differential magnification • All parts of the source are equally magnified

  19. Microlensing and the BELR • Medium source = differential magnification! • If the QSO's continuum region is much smaller than the BELR, then the continuum should be more highly magnified.

  20. Flux ratios Galaxy centre B D C • Extinction corrected flux ratios for continuum and broad-lines are certainly different! • Without microlensing, all images should have approx same magnitude, so BELR is also microlensed. • Because MgII and CIII] lines have same flux ratio, they must be similar size. • BELR size ~0.06pc based on simulations of Wyithe et. al 2002 (MNRAS 331) A

  21. Next: de-dispersed spectral ratios • After correcting for atmospheric dispersion, take ratios of image spectra • Broad-line magnifications clearly visible • Shape of continuum is a function of source morphology, microlensing and extinction • Shape/location of lines depends on BELR structure! C/A D/A B/A 8000 6000 5000 7000

  22. Summary • Using GMOS-N IFU we have taken the best spectroscopic data of 2237+0305 to date • We find no arc of emission in either the CIII] or MgII line, contrary to previous claims • Magnification ratios of the images in both the continuum and broad-lines show microlensing • BELR is measured from flux ratios to be ~0.06pc. This estimate will improve using de-dispersed data. • MNRAS 359 561 (2005)

More Related