2014ApJ...787L..12F


Query : 2014ApJ...787L..12F

2014ApJ...787L..12F - Astrophys. J., 787, L12 (2014/May-3)

A new cosmological distance measure using active galactic nucleus X-ray variability.

FRANCA F.L., BIANCHI S., PONTI G., BRANCHINI E. and MATT G.

Abstract (from CDS):

We report the discovery of a luminosity distance estimator using active galactic nuclei (AGNs). We combine the correlation between the X-ray variability amplitude and the black hole (BH) mass with the single-epoch spectra BH mass estimates which depend on the AGN luminosity and the line width emitted by the broad-line region. We demonstrate that significant correlations do exist that allow one to predict the AGN (optical or X-ray) luminosity as a function of the AGN X-ray variability and either the Hβ or the Paβ line widths. In the best case, when the Paβ is used, the relationship has an intrinsic dispersion of ∼0.6 dex. Although intrinsically more disperse than supernovae Ia, this relation constitutes an alternative distance indicator potentially able to probe, in an independent way, the expansion history of the universe. With respect to this, we show that the new mission concept Athena should be able to measure the X-ray variability of hundreds of AGNs and then constrain the distance modulus with uncertainties of 0.1 mag up to z ∼ 0.6. We also discuss how our estimator has the prospect of becoming a cosmological probe even more sensitive than the current supernovae Ia samples by using a new dedicated wide-field X-ray telescope able to measure the variability of thousands of AGNs.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): cosmological parameters - cosmology: observations - distance scale - galaxies: active - X-rays: general

Simbad objects: 40

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Number of rows : 40
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 Mrk 335 Sy1 00 06 19.5372339024 +20 12 10.617404076   14.19 13.85     ~ 1253 0
2 Mrk 1502 Sy1 00 53 34.9331107632 +12 41 35.929269132   14.41 14.03     ~ 1167 1
3 Ton S 180 Sy1 00 57 20.2040816832 -22 22 56.575212564   14.60 14.34 15.23   ~ 300 0
4 RX J0136.9-3510 Sy1 01 36 54.4576651920 -35 09 52.327612296   18.80   17.80   ~ 47 0
5 NGC 863 Sy1 02 14 33.5604714720 -00 46 00.181845336   14.48 13.81 17.9   ~ 689 0
6 ESO 198-24 Sy1 02 38 19.7164562112 -52 11 32.343907596   15.36 14.17 13.75   ~ 165 0
7 LEDA 476029 Sy1 03 23 15.2955207864 -49 31 06.106276164   16.62 16.5 15.57   ~ 37 0
8 Mrk 1506 Sy1 04 33 11.0956735296 +05 21 15.619461552   15.72 15.05 10.08   ~ 2000 2
9 Mrk 1095 Sy1 05 16 11.4092471904 -00 08 59.157166920   14.30 13.92     ~ 890 1
10 LEDA 88588 Sy1 07 08 41.4886614696 -49 33 06.308921700   16.02 15.7 12.7   ~ 517 0
11 Ton 951 Sy1 08 47 42.4485615096 +34 45 04.482515304   14.83 14.50     ~ 466 0
12 LEDA 26550 Sy1 09 22 47.0337452784 +51 20 37.977167616   17.89 17.56     ~ 84 0
13 Mrk 110 Sy1 09 25 12.8479065576 +52 17 10.386311208   16.82 16.41     ~ 604 0
14 NGC 3227 Sy1 10 23 30.5765149296 +19 51 54.282206700   12.61 11.79     ~ 1703 1
15 HE 1029-1401 Sy1 10 31 54.3173785536 -14 16 51.378102372   14.08 13.86     ~ 132 0
16 Z 212-25 Sy1 10 34 38.5982990352 +39 38 28.187042604   17.37 16.90     ~ 362 1
17 NGC 3516 Sy1 11 06 47.4632200800 +72 34 07.298374656   13.12 12.40     ~ 1543 0
18 NGC 3783 Sy1 11 39 01.7096819040 -37 44 19.009642992   12.46 13.43 11.33 12.1 ~ 1647 0
19 ATO J176.4186-18.4541 Sy1 11 45 40.4653497048 -18 27 14.962917636   14.63 14.29 10.5   ~ 168 0
20 NGC 4051 Sy1 12 03 09.6101337312 +44 31 52.682601288   11.08 12.92 9.94   ~ 2165 1
21 NGC 4151 Sy1 12 10 32.5759813872 +39 24 21.063527532   12.18 11.48     ~ 3688 2
22 PB 3894 Sy1 12 14 17.6738687784 +14 03 13.182723144   14.46 14.19     ~ 821 0
23 NGC 4253 Sy1 12 18 26.5163572920 +29 48 46.531535472   14.34 13.57     ~ 1040 1
24 NGC 4395 Sy2 12 25 48.8633109888 +33 32 48.700168152 10.84 10.54 10.11 9.98   ~ 1177 1
25 3C 273 BLL 12 29 06.6998257176 +02 03 08.597629980   13.05 14.830 14.11   ~ 5798 1
26 NGC 4593 Sy1 12 39 39.4435107024 -05 20 39.034988448   13.95 13.15     ~ 1090 0
27 LEDA 42648 Sy1 12 42 10.6050409800 +33 17 02.662913436   16.45 15.65     ~ 116 0
28 ESO 383-35 Sy1 13 35 53.7691256160 -34 17 44.160716796   13.89 13.61 8.9   ~ 1483 0
29 IRAS 13349+2438 Sy1 13 37 18.7199358192 +24 23 03.319883484     15.0     ~ 390 0
30 ESO 445-50 Sy1 13 49 19.2601801224 -30 18 34.213815504   13.81 13.66 12.18 12.35 ~ 804 0
31 Mrk 279 Sy1 13 53 03.4348964112 +69 18 29.410910460   15.15 14.46     ~ 761 0
32 2XMM J135724.5+652506 Sy1 13 57 24.5204418120 +65 25 05.952508176   18.91 18.58     ~ 46 0
33 NGC 5548 Sy1 14 17 59.5400291832 +25 08 12.603122268   14.35 13.73     ~ 2709 0
34 Mrk 478 Sy1 14 42 07.4714418744 +35 26 22.938625500   14.91 14.58     ~ 533 0
35 Mrk 841 Sy1 15 04 01.1935384104 +10 26 15.780409692   14.50 14.27     ~ 649 0
36 6C 170204+454510 Sy1 17 03 30.3824218008 +45 40 47.166180564   16.0       ~ 158 2
37 QSO B1725-142 QSO 17 28 19.7893499760 -14 15 55.854918288   14.69 14.03 13.7   ~ 308 0
38 Mrk 509 Sy1 20 44 09.7504483224 -10 43 24.727155528   13.35 13.12 10.7   ~ 1276 0
39 UGC 12163 Sy1 22 42 39.3363009144 +29 43 31.302092640   14.86 14.16     ~ 697 1
40 NGC 7469 Sy1 23 03 15.6 +08 52 26 12.60 13.00 12.34     ~ 2095 3

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