Direct Lyα imaging of intergalactic gas at has recently revealed giant cosmological structures around quasars, e.g., the Slug Nebula. Despite their high luminosity, the detection rate of such systems in narrow-band and spectroscopic surveys is less than 10%, possibly encoding crucial information on the distribution of gas around quasars and the quasar emission properties. In this study, we use the MUSE integral-field instrument to perform a blind survey for giant nebulae around 17 bright radio-quiet quasars at that does not suffer from most of the limitations of previous surveys. After data reduction and analysis performed with specifically developed tools, we found that each quasar is surrounded by giant nebulae with projected sizes larger than 100 physical kiloparsecs and, in some cases, extending up to 320 kpc. The circularly averaged surface brightness profiles of the nebulae appear to be very similar to each other despite their different morphologies and are consistent with power laws with slopes. The similarity between the properties of all these nebulae and the Slug Nebula suggests a similar origin for all systems and that a large fraction of gas around bright quasars could be in a relatively "cold" (T ∼ 104K) and dense phase. In addition, our results imply that such gas is ubiquitous within at least 50 kpc from bright quasars at independently of the quasar emission opening angle, or extending up to 200 kpc for quasar isotropic emission.

Borisova, E., Cantalupo, S., Lilly, S., Marino, R., Gallego, S., Bacon, R., et al. (2016). UBIQUITOUS GIANT Lyα NEBULAE AROUND the BRIGHTEST QUASARS at z ∼ 3.5 REVEALED with MUSE. THE ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 831(1) [10.3847/0004-637X/831/1/39].

UBIQUITOUS GIANT Lyα NEBULAE AROUND the BRIGHTEST QUASARS at z ∼ 3.5 REVEALED with MUSE

Cantalupo S.;
2016

Abstract

Direct Lyα imaging of intergalactic gas at has recently revealed giant cosmological structures around quasars, e.g., the Slug Nebula. Despite their high luminosity, the detection rate of such systems in narrow-band and spectroscopic surveys is less than 10%, possibly encoding crucial information on the distribution of gas around quasars and the quasar emission properties. In this study, we use the MUSE integral-field instrument to perform a blind survey for giant nebulae around 17 bright radio-quiet quasars at that does not suffer from most of the limitations of previous surveys. After data reduction and analysis performed with specifically developed tools, we found that each quasar is surrounded by giant nebulae with projected sizes larger than 100 physical kiloparsecs and, in some cases, extending up to 320 kpc. The circularly averaged surface brightness profiles of the nebulae appear to be very similar to each other despite their different morphologies and are consistent with power laws with slopes. The similarity between the properties of all these nebulae and the Slug Nebula suggests a similar origin for all systems and that a large fraction of gas around bright quasars could be in a relatively "cold" (T ∼ 104K) and dense phase. In addition, our results imply that such gas is ubiquitous within at least 50 kpc from bright quasars at independently of the quasar emission opening angle, or extending up to 200 kpc for quasar isotropic emission.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
cosmology: observations; galaxies: high-redshift; intergalactic medium; quasars: emission lines; quasars: general;
English
2016
831
1
39
none
Borisova, E., Cantalupo, S., Lilly, S., Marino, R., Gallego, S., Bacon, R., et al. (2016). UBIQUITOUS GIANT Lyα NEBULAE AROUND the BRIGHTEST QUASARS at z ∼ 3.5 REVEALED with MUSE. THE ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 831(1) [10.3847/0004-637X/831/1/39].
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/297387
Citazioni
  • Scopus 207
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 140
Social impact