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Evolution of Quasar Population 0 z 6.3

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Title: Evolution of Quasar Population 0 z 6.3


1
Evolution of Quasar Population0 lt z lt 6.3
  • Xiaohui Fan
  • Institute For Advanced Study

2
Introduction
  • Evolution of quasars provides
  • Constraints on quasar model
  • Information on large scale structure
  • Picture of UV ionizing background
  • Difficulty in studying quasar evolution
  • Lack of large, uniform sample
  • Complicated selection effect
  • Interpreting the data whats the relation
    between quasar and galaxy evolution

3
New Era in Quasar Astronomy
  • New observations
  • Emergence of large, uniform quasar surveys
    including tens of thousands of quasars
  • First detection of quasars and galaxies at zgt5
    explosion in the number of quasars at zgt4

4
New Era in Quasar Astronomy
  • New Observations
  • Study of galaxy evolution at zgt2 enables the
    comparison of high-z populations
  • Discovery of supermassive BHs in normal galaxies
    relation between galaxy and BH properties
  • New Models
  • Semi-analytic models that include BH and AGN
    activity in galaxy evolution picture, and the
    realization of the connection between BH activity
    and merger
  • New Question
  • Characterize quasar evolution with new samples
  • Relation between Quasar and Galaxy Evolution

5
Outline
  • SDSS Quasar Survey
  • Evolution of Quasar Luminosity Function
  • Comparing to galaxy evolution
  • Large Scale Distribution of Quasars
  • Clustering and bias of quasars
  • Search for the First Quasars
  • What do z6 quasars tell us about cosmology
  • Multiwavelength Observation of High-z Quasars
  • Summary
  • Collaboration Anderson, Richards, Schneider,
    Strauss, Vanden Berk All SDSS collaborators

6
SDSS Overview
  • Primary Telescope 2.5m wide-field (2.5 deg)
  • Imaging Survey (wide-field 54 CCD imager)
  • Main Survey 10000 deg2
  • Five bands, 3000-10000A
  • r_lim 23, z_lim 21
  • Deep Survey 300 deg2, r_lim 25
  • Spectroscopic Survey
  • 106 galaxies (rlt17.8)
  • 105 quasars ( 0 lt z lt 6)
  • Interesting stars, radio/x-ray sources etc.

7
Survey Status
  • Survey Started Apr 2000
  • Currently
  • 2000 deg2 imaging
  • More than 150,000 spectra
  • Early Data Release
  • June 2001
  • 560 deg2 of imaging and spectroscopy
  • Final Data Release 2005 - 2006

8
SDSS Filter System
  • Five filters cover entire optical wavelength
  • u (3560), g(4680), r(6180), i(7490), z(8870)
  • u under Balmer jump ? separating quasars and hot
    stars
  • z extends beyond 1 micron ? red sources,
    quasars, BDS
  • z2.8 quasars and A/F stars have similar color
    in all bands

9
SDSS Quasar Selection Pipeline
10
SDSS Quasar Survey
  • Color Selection of Quasars
  • Candidates defined as outliers in SDSS color
    space
  • Not strongly biased against red quasars
  • Morphological Cut
  • Includes extended sources at low-z
  • Not biased against AGNs
  • Automatic Targeting Optical Counterparts of radio
    (FIRST) and X-ray (RASS) sources

Z3.5
Z4
Z3
Z3.5
Z2
Z4.5
Z5
11
SDSS Quasar Survey
  • Low-z quasars (zlt3)
  • i_lim lt 19.1 ?100,000 quasars
  • Efficiency 65 completeness 90
  • High-z quasars (zgt3)
  • i_lim lt 20.5
  • 10000 quasars at z gt 3 500 1000 at z gt 4
  • z band allows detection of quasars up to z6.5
  • Progress gt 10,000 quasars discovered from early
    SDSS data at 0 lt z lt 6.3

12
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13
Evolution of Quasar LF
  • Sample
  • 4000 quasars from SDSS main sample covering 300
    deg2
  • 110 quasars at zgt3.6 covering 500 deg2
    (follow-up spectroscopy done separately)
  • 25 quasars at z gt 4.5 covering 1000 deg2
  • Correction of Selection Effect
  • Selection probability calculated from simulation
    of quasar colors, as function of z, M and SED
    shape
  • Sample biased against red quasars (alpha gt 2.5)
  • Sample slightly biased against weak EM lines

14
Evolution of Quasar LF
  • Color Selection Insensitive to certain redshift
    range
  • z0.7
  • z2.8 stellar locus crosses quasar locus
  • z3.5
  • z4.6

15
Evolution of Quasar LF from SDSS Sample
16
Evolution of Quasar LF from SDSS Sample
17
Evolution of Quasar Luminosity Density (Madau
Plot for Quasars)
18
Evolution of Quasar Luminosity Density as a
Function of Cosmic Age
19
Quasar Evolution at High-z
20
Shape of Quasar LF at High-z
  • LF fit by a single power law in luminosity range
    probed
  • At z4 quasar luminosity function much FLATTER
    than LF at z2
  • Shape of quasar LF evolves with redshift as well
  • Even less UV ionizing photon at high-z from
    quasar than previously calculated?

21
Evolution of Quasar LF
  • Quasar density peaks at z 2 3 and declines by
    a factor of 20 from 3 to 5.5
  • The exponentially decline (10-0.5z) continues
    to zgt5
  • Luminous high-z quasar evolves faster than normal
    galaxy population
  • Current surveys do not probe the faint end of LF
    at high-z majority of high-z quasars have not
    been observed!
  • Little constraint on faint end LF evolution
  • Total amount of UV ionization still uncertain

22
Clustering of Quasars
  • What does quasar clustering tell us?
  • Bias factor of quasars ? average DM halo mass
  • Combining with quasar density ? quasar lifetime
  • Density of quasar (obs) / density of halo
    (inferred from halo mass) ? fraction of quasar
    being active
  • Difficulty
  • Observation quasars are rare ? very
    sparse-sampled
  • Theory L(quasar) is a function of mass,
    accretion rate, radiative efficiency, dust. ?
    difficult to compare with models

23
Quasar Two-point Correlation Function at zlt2.5
24
Quasar Two-point Correlation Function at zlt2.5
25
FunctionQuasars vs. Galaxies
26
Distribution of z4 Quasars in 500 deg2
27
Preliminary Results at High-z
28
Evolution of Quasar Clustering
29
Evolution of Quasar Clustering
  • At zlt2 r_0 7 Mpc/h
  • Slow evolution with redshift
  • Might be function of luminosity
  • At z4
  • Quasars strongly clustered (r_0 20 Mpc/h)
  • Stronger than the clustering of low-z quasars or
    high-z LBGs
  • Luminous high-z quasars are in massive system and
    represent very rare peaks of the density field
  • Quasar correlation consistent with a quasar halo
    mass of 1012 1013 M_solar, and short
    life-time (107-108 years)

30
Search for the First Quasars
  • Color selection of i-drop out quasars
  • SDSS z-filter sensitive to z6.5
  • At zgt5.5, quasars have only i-z color
  • Major contaminants are L and T type Brown Dwarfs

31
Search for the First Quasars
  • Separating z6 quasars and BDs
  • Using IR photometry
  • For quasar z-J 1
  • For late-L to T z-J gt 2.5
  • SDSS sensitive to z6.5

32
SDSS Red Object Survey
  • Search for i-drop objects
  • ( i-z gt 2)
  • Follow-up J and z band photometry
  • Eliminate spurious detection
  • Separate BD and high-z quasar
  • gt 1000 sq. deg surveyed ( z lt 20)
  • Four luminous quasars 5.8 lt z lt 6.3
  • A dozen T dwarf and large number of L dwarf
  • Establishing T dwarf spectral sequence
  • Complete sample of BDs ? LF and MF

33
Discovery of Two z5.8 Quasars
  • Very Luminous (M_B -27.5 -28)
  • J0836 radio loud (20cm 1mJy)
  • Strong metal lines early metal production

34
Limit on Re-ionization Redshift
  • Lyman decrement 90
  • No Gunn-Peterson Trough Universe highly ionized
    at z6
  • Upper limit on Gunn-Peterson optical depth lt 0.4

35
Discovery of Quasars at zgt6
36
Cosmological Implications?
  • M_BH 5 x 109 M_solar
  • Assuming Eddington and no lensing
  • Density of z5.8 quasars consistent with
    extrapolation from zlt5
  • These luminous quasars must be in very massive
    halo and on the tail of mass func at high-z
  • Strong constraints on quasar and large scale
    structure models
  • Next FIND THE FAINT ONES!

37
X-ray Observation of SDSS1044
  • An X-ray study of zgt4.8 SDSS quasars with Chandra
    and XMM (P.I. N. Brandt)
  • First target SDSS1044 (z5.8)
  • 40ks on XMM, 32 counts detected

38
X-ray Observation of SDSS1044
  • SDSS1044 is X-ray weak
  • 10 times weaker than normal z4 quasars with
    similar luminosity
  • Indication of heavy absorption in the immediate
    environment
  • IR observation shows that it is a CIV BAL quasar

39
Sub-mm and Radio Obs of High-z Quasars
  • A 250 GHz and 1.4GHz survey of 41 quasars at
    zgt3.6 (w/ Carilli, Rupen)
  • 16/41 detected in 250GHz (rest-frame sub-mm)
    brighter than 1mJy
  • Combination of cm and submm ? submm radiation
    from thermal dust with mass 108 M_solar
  • Dust heating can be from AGN or from starburst ?
    star forming rate of 500 2000 M_solar/year
  • Future FIR-submm observations could reveal the
    relation between quasar and starburst

40
Color Space Outliers Others Than Normal Quasars
  • Brown Dwarfs
  • L dwarf (Teff 1400 2000K)
  • T dwarf (Teff 800 1400 K), methane dominated
    IR spectrum, smallest free-floating object
  • Compact Field EA and Emission Line Galaxy
  • Weird BAL Quasars
  • Cool White Dwarfs
  • Subdwarfs
  • Carbon Stars
  • Mystery Objects New Class of Objects??

41
Summary
  • SDSS quasar survey
  • 100,000 quasars at 0 lt z lt 6.5 in five years
  • Currently, 10, 000 quasars, including 200 at zgt4
  • Quasar Density Evolution
  • Strong redshift evolution, different from galaxy
  • Exponential decline at zgt3, until at least z6
  • Quasars are strongly clustered
  • High-z quasars in massive halos and are short
    lived
  • Observations of z6 quasars
  • Early metal production
  • IGM highly ionized at z6

42
Whats Next?
  • Evolution of faint quasars
  • High-z shape of LF nature of ionizing
    background
  • Low-z AGN/galaxy connection
  • Evolution of different types of quasars radio,
    X-ray, BAL, narrow-line etc.
  • Evolution of quasar clustering
  • Clustering at different luminosity, subclass ?
    relation to host galaxy mass
  • High-order statistics, power spectrum at high-z
    from quasars
  • Complete sample at zgt6
  • SED of high-z quasars role of dust and absorption
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