Browsing by Author "Ricci, Federica "
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- ItemBASS XXXII: Studying the Nuclear Millimeter-wave Continuum Emission of AGNs with ALMA at Scales ≲100-200 pc(2022) Kawamuro, Taiki; Ricci, Claudio; Imanishi, Masatoshi; Mushotzky, Richard F.; Izumi, Takuma; Ricci, Federica; Bauer, Franz E.; Koss, Michael J.; Trakhtenbrot, Benny; Ichikawa, Kohei; Rojas, Alejandra F.; Smith, Krista Lynne; Shimizu, Taro; Oh, Kyuseok; den Brok, Jakob S.; Baba, Shunsuke; Balokovic, Mislay; Chang, Chin-Shin; Kakkad, Darshan; Pfeifle, Ryan W.; Privon, George C.; Temple, Matthew J.; Ueda, Yoshihiro; Harrison, Fiona; Powell, Meredith C.; Stern, Daniel; Urry, Meg; Sanders, David B.To understand the origin of nuclear (less than or similar to 100 pc) millimeter-wave (mm-wave) continuum emission in active galactic nuclei (AGNs), we systematically analyzed subarcsecond resolution Band-6 (211-275 GHz) Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array data of 98 nearby AGNs (z < 0.05) from the 70 month Swift/BAT catalog. The sample, almost unbiased for obscured systems, provides the largest number of AGNs to date with high mm-wave spatial resolution sampling (similar to 1-200 pc), and spans broad ranges of 14-150 keV luminosity {40< log [L-14(-150)/(erg s(-1))] < 45}, black hole mass [5 < log(M-BH/M-circle dot) < 10], and Eddington ratio (-4 < log lambda(Edd) < 2). We find a significant correlation between 1.3 mm (230 GHz) and 14-150 keV luminosities. Its scatter is approximate to 0.36 dex, and the mm-wave emission may serve as a good proxy of the AGN luminosity, free of dust extinction up to N-H similar to 10(26) CM-2. While the mm-wave emission could be self-absorbed synchrotron radiation around the X-ray corona according to past works, we also discuss different possible origins of the mm-wave emission: AGN-related dust emission, outflow-driven shocks, and a small-scale (<200 pc) jet. The dust emission is unlikely to be dominant, as the mm-wave slope is generally flatter than expected. Also, due to no increase in the mm-wave luminosity with the Eddington ratio, a radiation-driven outflow model is possibly not the common mechanism Furthermore, we find independence of the mm-wave luminosity on indicators of the inclination angle from the polar axis of the nuclear structure, which is inconsistent with a jet model whose luminosity depends only on the angle.
- ItemBASS-XL: X-ray variability properties of unobscured active galactic nuclei(2023) Tortosa, Alessia; Ricci, Claudio; Arevalo, Patricia; Koss, Michael J.; Bauer, Franz E.; Trakhtenbrot, Benny; Mushotzky, Richard; Temple, Matthew J.; Ricci, Federica; Lilayu, Alejandra Rojas; Kawamuro, Taiki; Caglar, Turgay; Liu, Tingting; Harrison, Fiona; Oh, Kyuseok; Powell, Meredith Clark; Stern, Daniel; Urry, Claudia MeganWe investigate the X-ray variability properties of Seyfert 1 Galaxies belonging to the BAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey (BASS). The sample includes 151 unobscured (N-H < 10(22) cm(-2)) AGNs observed with XMM-Newton for a total exposure time of similar to 27 ms, representing the deepest variability study done so far with high signal-to-noise XMM-Newton observations, almost doubling the number of observations analysed in previous works. We constrain the relation between the normalized excess variance and the 2-10 keV AGN luminosities, black hole masses, and Eddington ratios. We find a highly significant correlation between sigma(2)(NXS) and M-BH, with a scatter of similar to 0.85 dex. For sources with high L2-10 this correlation has a lower normalization, confirming that more luminous (higher mass) AGNs show less variability. We explored the sigma(2)(NXS) versus M-BH relation for the sub-sample of sources with M-BH estimated via the 'reverberation mapping' technique, finding a tighter anticorrelation, with a scatter of similar to 0.65 dex. We examine how the sigma(2)(NXS) changes with energy by studying the relation between the variability in the hard (3-10 keV) and the soft (0.2-1 keV)/medium (1-3 keV) energy bands, finding that the spectral components dominating the hard energy band are more variable than the spectral components dominating in softer energy bands, on time-scales shorter than 10 ks.
- ItemBASS. XXIV. The BASS DR2 Spectroscopic Line Measurements and AGN Demographics(2022) Oh, Kyuseok; Koss, Michael J.; Ueda, Yoshihiro; Stern, Daniel; Ricci, Claudio; Trakhtenbrot, Benny; Powell, Meredith C.; den Brok, Jakob S.; Lamperti, Isabella; Mushotzky, Richard; Ricci, Federica; Bar, Rudolf E.; Rojas, Alejandra F.; Ichikawa, Kohei; Riffel, Rogerio; Treister, Ezequiel; Harrison, Fiona; Urry, C. Megan; Bauer, Franz E.; Schawinski, KevinWe present the second catalog and data release of optical spectral line measurements and active galactic nucleus (AGN) demographics of the BAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey, which focuses on the Swift-BAT hard X-ray detected AGNs. We use spectra from dedicated campaigns and publicly available archives to investigate spectral properties of most of the AGNs listed in the 70 month Swift-BAT all-sky catalog; specifically, 743 of the 746 unbeamed and unlensed AGNs (99.6%). We find a good correspondence between the optical emission line widths and the hydrogen column density distributions using the X-ray spectra, with a clear dichotomy of AGN types for N (H) = 10(22) cm(-2). Based on optical emission-line diagnostics, we show that 48%-75% of BAT AGNs are classified as Seyfert, depending on the choice of emission lines used in the diagnostics. The fraction of objects with upper limits on line emission varies from 6% to 20%. Roughly 4% of the BAT AGNs have lines too weak to be placed on the most commonly used diagnostic diagram, [O iii]lambda 5007/H beta versus [N ii]lambda 6584/H alpha, despite the high signal-to-noise ratio of their spectra. This value increases to 35% in the [O iii]lambda 5007/[O ii]lambda 3727 diagram, owing to difficulties in line detection. Compared to optically selected narrow-line AGNs in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, the BAT narrow-line AGNs have a higher rate of reddening/extinction, with H alpha/H beta > 5 (similar to 36%), indicating that hard X-ray selection more effectively detects obscured AGNs from the underlying AGN population. Finally, we present a subpopulation of AGNs that feature complex broad lines (34%, 250/743) or double-peaked narrow emission lines (2%, 17/743).
- ItemBASS. XXIX. The Near-infrared View of the Broad-line Region (BLR): The Effects of Obscuration in BLR Characterization(2022) Ricci, Federica ; Treister, Ezequiel ; Bauer, Franz E.; Mejía-Restrepo, Julian E. ; Koss, Michael J. ; den Brok, Jakob S. ; Baloković, Mislav ; Bär, Rudolf ; Bessiere, Patricia ; Caglar, Turgay ; Harrison, Fiona ; Ichikawa, Kohei ; Kakkad, Darshan; Lamperti, Isabella ; Mushotzky, Richard ; Oh, Kyuseok ; Powell, Meredith C. ; Privon, George C. ; Ricci, Claudio ; Riffel, Rogerio ; Rojas, Alejandra F. ; Sani, Eleonora ; Smith, Krista L. ; Stern, Daniel ; Trakhtenbrot, Benny ; Urry, C. Megan ; Veilleux, Sylvain
- ItemBASS. XXVIII. Near-infrared Data Release 2: High-ionization and Broad Lines in Active Galactic Nuclei(2022) den Brok, Jakob S.; Koss, Michael J.; Trakhtenbrot, Benny; Stern, Daniel; Cantalupo, Sebastiano; Lamperti, Isabella; Ricci, Federica; Ricci, Claudio; Oh, Kyuseok; Bauer, Franz E.; Riffel, Rogerio; Rodriguez-Ardila, Alberto; Baer, Rudolf; Harrison, Fiona; Ichikawa, Kohei; Mejia-Restrepo, Julian E.; Mushotzky, Richard; Powell, Meredith C.; Boissay-Malaquin, Rozenn; Stalevski, Marko; Treister, Ezequiel; Urry, C. Megan; Veilleux, SylvainWe present the BAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey (BASS) Near-infrared Data Release 2 (DR2), a study of 168 nearby ((z) over bar = 0.04, z < 0.6) active galactic nuclei (AGN) from the all-sky Swift Burst Array Telescope X-ray survey observed with the Very Large Telescope (VLT)/X-shooter in the near-infrared (NIR; 0.8-2.4 mu m). We find that 49/109 (45%) Seyfert 2 and 35/58 (60%) Seyfert 1 galaxies observed with VLT/X-shooter show at least one NIR high-ionization coronal line (CL; ionization potential chi > 100 eV). Comparing the emission of the [Si VI] lambda 1.9640 CL with the X-ray emission for the DR2 AGN, we find a significantly tighter correlation, with a lower scatter (0.37 dex) than that for the optical [O III] lambda 5007 line (0.71 dex). We do not find any correlation between CL emission and the X-ray photon index Gamma. We find a clear trend of line blueshifts with increasing ionization potential in several CLs, such as [Si VI] lambda 1.9640, [Si X] lambda 1.4300, [S VIII] lambda 0.9915, and [S IX] lambda 1.2520, indicating the radial structure of the CL region. Finally, we find a strong underestimation bias in black hole mass measurements of Sy 1.9 using broad H alpha due to the presence of significant dust obscuration. In contrast, the broad Pa alpha and Pa beta emission lines are in agreement with the M-sigma relation. Based on the combined DR1 and DR2 X-shooter sample, the NIR BASS sample now comprises 266 AGN with rest-frame NIR spectroscopic observations, the largest set assembled to date.
- ItemBASS. XXXIV. A Catalog of the Nuclear Millimeter-wave Continuum Emission Properties of AGNs Constrained on Scales ≤ 100-200 pc(IOP Publishing Ltd, 2023) Kawamuro, Taiki; Ricci, Claudio; Mushotzky, Richard F.; Imanishi, Masatoshi; Bauer, Franz Erik; Ricci, Federica; Koss, Michael J.; Privon, George C.; Trakhtenbrot, Benny; Izumi, Takuma; Ichikawa, Kohei; Rojas, Alejandra F.; Smith, Krista Lynne; Shimizu, Taro; Oh, Kyuseok; den Brok, Jakob S.; Baba, Shunsuke; Balokovic, Mislav; Chang, Chin-Shin; Kakkad, Darshan; Pfeifle, Ryan W.; Temple, Matthew J.; Ueda, Yoshihiro; Harrison, Fiona; Powell, Meredith C.; Stern, Daniel; Urry, Meg; Sanders, David B.We present a catalog of the millimeter-wave (mm-wave) continuum properties of 98 nearby (z < 0.05) active galactic nuclei (AGNs) selected from the 70 month Swift/BAT hard-X-ray catalog that have precisely determined X-ray spectral properties and subarcsecond-resolution Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array Band 6 (211-275 GHz) observations as of 2021 April. Due to the hard-X-ray (>10 keV) selection, the sample is nearly unbiased for obscured systems at least up to Compton-thick-level obscuration, and provides the largest number of AGNs with high-physical-resolution mm-wave data (less than or similar to 100-200 pc). Our catalog reports emission peak coordinates, spectral indices, and peak fluxes and luminosities at 1.3 mm (230 GHz). Additionally, high-resolution mm-wave images are provided. Using the images and creating radial surface brightness profiles of mm-wave emission, we identify emission extending from the central sources and isolated blob-like emission. Flags indicating the presence of these emission features are tabulated. Among 90 AGNs with significant detections of nuclear emission, 37 AGNs (approximate to 41%) appear to have both or one of extended or blob-like components. We, in particular, investigate AGNs that show well-resolved mm-wave components and find that these seem to have a variety of origins (i.e., a jet, radio lobes, a secondary AGN, stellar clusters, a narrow-line region, galaxy disk, active star formation regions, or AGN-driven outflows), and some components have currently unclear origins.
- ItemBAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey - XIX. Type 1 versus type 2 AGN dichotomy from the point of view of ionized outflows(2020) Rojas, AF; Sani, E; Gavignaud, I; Ricci, Claudio; Lamperti, I; Koss, M; Trakhtenbrot, B; Schawinski, K; Bauer, Franz Erik; Bischetti, M; Boissay-Malaquin, R; Bongiorno, A; Harrison, F; Kakkad, D; Masetti, N; Ricci, Federica; Shimizu, T; Stalevski, M; Stern, D; Vietri, G; Rojas, AF; Sani, E; Gavignaud, I; Ricci, Claudio; Lamperti, I; Koss, M; Trakhtenbrot, B; Schawinski, K; Bauer, Franz Erik; Bischetti, M; Boissay-Malaquin, R; Bongiorno, A; Harrison, F; Kakkad, D; Masetti, N; Ricci, Federica; Shimizu, T; Stalevski, M; Stern, D; Vietri, G
- ItemSignificant Suppression of Star Formation in Radio-quiet AGN Host Galaxies with Kiloparsec-scale Radio Structures(2020) Smith, Krista Lynne; Koss, Michael; Mushotzky, Richard; Wong, O. Ivy; Shimizu, T. Taro; Ricci, Claudio; Ricci, FedericaWe conducted 22 GHz 1 '' Jansky Very Large Array imaging of 100 radio-quiet X-ray-selected active galactic nuclei (AGN) from the Swift-Burst Array Telescope (Swift-BAT) survey. We find AGN-driven kiloparsec-scale radio structures inconsistent with pure star formation in 11 AGN. The host galaxies of these AGN lie significantly below the star-forming main sequence, indicating suppressed star formation. While these radio structures tend to be physically small compared to the host galaxy, the global star formation rate of the host is affected. We evaluate the energetics of the radio structures interpreted first as immature radio jets, and then as consequences of an AGN-driven radiative outflow, and compare them to two criteria for successful feedback: the ability to remove the CO-derived molecular gas mass from the galaxy gravitational potential and the kinetic energy transfer to molecular clouds leading to v(cloud) > sigma(*). In most cases, the jet interpretation is insufficient to provide the energy necessary to cause the star formation suppression. Conversely, the wind interpretation provides ample energy in all but one case. We conclude that it is more likely that the observed suppression of star formation in the global host galaxy is due to interstellar medium interactions of a radiative outflow, rather than a small-scale radio jet.