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19 April 2024
 
  » arxiv » astro-ph/0409125

 Article overview


Compact radio cores: from the first black holes to the last
H. Falcke ; E. Koerding ; N.M. Nagar ( ASTRON ; Dwingeloo ; The Netherlands ; Max-Planck-Institut fuer Radioastronomie ;
Date 6 Sep 2004
Subject astro-ph
Affiliation ASTRON, Dwingeloo, The Netherlands, Max-Planck-Institut fuer Radioastronomie (MPIfR), Kapteyn Institute, The Netherlands
AbstractOne of the clearest signs of black hole activity is the presence of a compact radio core in the nuclei of galaxies. With the Square Kilometer Array (SKA) these cores can be used to study the evolution of black holes throughout the universe and even to detect the very first generation of supermassive black holes. We start by introducing some of the basic properties of compact radio cores and how they scale with accretion power. The relative contribution of jets and radio cores to the Spectral Energy Distribution (SED) is strongest in sub-Eddington black holes but also present in the most luminous objects. Radio and X-rays are correlated as a function of black hole mass such that the most massive black holes are most suited for radio detections. We present a radio core luminosity function for the present universe down to the least luminous AGN. The SKA will essentially detect all dormant black holes in the local universe, such as that in our Milky Way, out to several tens of Megaparsecs. It will also be able to see black holes in the making at redshifts z>10 for black hole masses larger than 10^7 M_sun. Finally, we suggest that the first generation of black holes may have jets that are frustrated in their dense environment and thus appear as Gigahertz-Peaked-Spectrum (GPS) sources. Since their intrinsic size and peak frequency are related and angular size and frequency scale differently with redshift, there is a unique region in parameter space that should be occupied by emerging black holes in the epoch of reionization. This can be well probed by radio-only methods with the SKA. (abridged)
Source arXiv, astro-ph/0409125
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