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Browsing by Author "Turner, James E. H."

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    About AGN ionization echoes, thermal echoes and ionization deficits in low-redshift Ly alpha blobs
    (Oxford University Press, 2016-07-28) Schirmer, Mischa; Malhotra, Sangeeta; Levenson, Nancy A.; Fu, Hai; Davies, Rebecca L.; Keel, William C.; Torrey, Paul; Bennert, Vardha N.; Pancoast, Anna; Turner, James E. H.; Arizona State University; Arizona State University-Tempe; University of Iowa; Australian National University; University of Alabama Tuscaloosa; Harvard University; Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory; Smithsonian Institution; Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT); California State University System; California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo
    We report the discovery of 14 Ly alpha blobs (LABs) at z similar to 0.3, existing at least 4-7 billion years later in the Universe than all other LABs known. Their optical diameters are 20-70 kpc, and GALEX data imply Ly alpha luminosities of (0.4-6.3) x 10(43) erg s(-1). Contrary to high-z LABs, they live in low-density areas. They are ionized by AGN, suggesting that cold accretion streams as a power source must deplete between z = 2 and 0.3. We also show that transient AGN naturally explain the ionization deficits observed in many LABs. Their Ly alpha and X-ray fluxes decorrelate below less than or similar to 10(6) years because of the delayed escape of resonantly scattering Ly alpha photons. High Ly alpha luminosities do not require currently powerful AGN, independent of obscuration. Chandra X-ray data reveal intrinsically weak AGN, confirming the luminous optical nebulae as impressive ionization echoes. For the first time, we also report mid-infrared thermal echoes from the dusty tori. We conclude that the AGN have faded by three to four orders of magnitude within the last 10(4-5) years, leaving fossil UV, optical and thermal radiation behind. The host galaxies belong to the group of previously discovered Green Bean galaxies (GBs). Gemini optical imaging reveals smooth spheres, mergers, spectacular outflows and ionization cones. Because of their proximity and high flux densities, GBs are perfect targets to study AGN feedback, mode switching and the Ly alpha escape. The fully calibrated, co-added optical FITS images are publicly available.

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