论文标题
低表面 - 亮度星系中的核X射线活性:通过Chandra继任任务限制当地黑洞职业的前景
Nuclear X-ray Activity in Low-Surface-Brightness Galaxies: Prospects for Constraining the Local Black Hole Occupation Fraction with a Chandra Successor Mission
论文作者
论文摘要
大约一半的附近星系具有中央表面亮度> 1级以下。这些低表面亮度星系(LSBG)的总体特性仍在研究中,尤其是我们对它们的大量黑洞人群的了解一无所知。必须封闭此差距,以确定Z = 0处的巨大黑洞的频率,并了解它们在调节星系演化中的作用。在这里,我们研究了Chandra X射线观测站附近32个LSBG的样品中的核,积聚X射线发射的发病率和强度。在4个星系中检测到核X射线源(12.5%)。基于针对正常星系开发的X射线二元污染评估技术,我们得出结论,检测到的X射线核表明来自大型黑洞的低水平积聚。当使用非偏见的正常星系调查的缩放关系时,活跃的分数与LSBG的恒星质量分布的预期是一致的,而不是其总重质质量。这表明他们的黑洞与恒星人口共同发展。此外,明显的一致性几乎增加了约100 MPC内可用的星系数量,核活动的测量可以有效地约束黑洞的频率,这是恒星质量的函数。最后,我们讨论了将该职业分数衡量的可行性低于1e10太阳能量的几个百分之几,目前正在考虑的高分辨率,广阔的X射线任务。
About half of nearby galaxies have a central surface brightness >1 magnitude below that of the sky. The overall properties of these low-surface-brightness galaxies (LSBGs) remain understudied, and in particular we know very little about their massive black hole population. This gap must be closed to determine the frequency of massive black holes at z=0 as well as to understand their role in regulating galaxy evolution. Here we investigate the incidence and intensity of nuclear, accretion-powered X-ray emission in a sample of 32 nearby LSBGs with the Chandra X-ray Observatory. A nuclear X-ray source is detected in 4 galaxies (12.5%). Based on an X-ray binary contamination assessment technique developed for normal galaxies, we conclude that the detected X-ray nuclei indicate low-level accretion from massive black holes. The active fraction is consistent with that expected from the stellar mass distribution of the LSBGs, but not their total baryonic mass, when using a scaling relation from an unbiased X-ray survey of normal galaxies. This suggests that their black holes co-evolved with their stellar population. In addition, the apparent agreement nearly doubles the number of galaxies available within ~100 Mpc for which a measurement of nuclear activity can efficiently constrain the frequency of black holes as a function of stellar mass. We conclude by discussing the feasibility of measuring this occupation fraction to a few percent precision below 1e10 solar masses with high-resolution, wide-field X-ray missions currently under consideration.