THE LOW FREQUENCY OF DUAL ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI VERSUS THE HIGH MERGER RATE OF GALAXIES: A PHENOMENOLOGICAL MODEL
Published 2011 View Full Article
- Home
- Publications
- Publication Search
- Publication Details
Title
THE LOW FREQUENCY OF DUAL ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI VERSUS THE HIGH MERGER RATE OF GALAXIES: A PHENOMENOLOGICAL MODEL
Authors
Keywords
-
Journal
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 738, Issue 1, Pages 92
Publisher
IOP Publishing
Online
2011-08-17
DOI
10.1088/0004-637x/738/1/92
References
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- MERGERS IN DOUBLE-PEAKED [O III] ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI
- (2011) Hai Fu et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- TYPE 2 ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI WITH DOUBLE-PEAKED [O III] LINES. II. SINGLE AGNs WITH COMPLEX NARROW-LINE REGION KINEMATICS ARE MORE COMMON THAN BINARY AGNs
- (2011) Yue Shen et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- Galaxy pairs in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey - III. Evidence of induced star formation from optical colours
- (2011) David R. Patton et al. MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
- An expanded Mbh-σ diagram, and a new calibration of active galactic nuclei masses
- (2011) Alister W. Graham et al. MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
- Supermassive black holes do not correlate with galaxy disks or pseudobulges
- (2011) John Kormendy et al. NATURE
- MERGERS AND BULGE FORMATION IN ΛCDM: WHICH MERGERS MATTER?
- (2010) Philip F. Hopkins et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- A SEARCH FOR BINARY ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI: DOUBLE-PEAKED [O III] AGNs IN THE SLOAN DIGITAL SKY SURVEY
- (2010) K. L. Smith et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- SDSS J1254+0846: A BINARY QUASAR CAUGHT IN THE ACT OF MERGING
- (2010) Paul J. Green et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- GALAXY STELLAR MASS ASSEMBLY BETWEEN 0.2
- (2010) O. Ilbert et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- THE CFHTLS-DEEP CATALOG OF INTERACTING GALAXIES. I. MERGER RATE EVOLUTION TOz= 1.2
- (2010) C. R. Bridge et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- DISCOVERY OF FOUR kpc-SCALE BINARY ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI
- (2010) Xin Liu et al. Astrophysical Journal Letters
- The effect of mass ratio on the morphology and time-scales of disc galaxy mergers
- (2010) Jennifer M. Lotz et al. MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
- The galaxy major merger fraction to ${z}$ ~ 1
- (2009) C. López-Sanjuan et al. ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
- The VIMOS VLT Deep Survey
- (2009) L. de Ravel et al. ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
- The [O iii] emission line luminosity function of optically selected type-2 AGN from zCOSMOS$^{\rm,}$
- (2009) A. Bongiorno et al. ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
- TYPE 2 ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI WITH DOUBLE-PEAKED [O III] LINES: NARROW-LINE REGION KINEMATICS OR MERGING SUPERMASSIVE BLACK HOLE PAIRS?
- (2009) Xin Liu et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- NARROW DOUBLE-PEAKED EMISSION LINES OF SDSS J131642.90+175332.5: SIGNATURE OF A SINGLE OR A BINARY AGN IN A MERGER, JET-CLOUD INTERACTION, OR UNUSUAL NARROW-LINE REGION GEOMETRY
- (2009) Dawei Xu et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- 1.75h–1kpc SEPARATION DUAL ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI ATz= 0.36 IN THE COSMOS FIELD
- (2009) Julia M. Comerford et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI WITH DOUBLE-PEAKED NARROW LINES: ARE THEY DUAL ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI?
- (2009) Jian-Min Wang et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- ON THE COSMIC EVOLUTION OF THE SCALING RELATIONS BETWEEN BLACK HOLES AND THEIR HOST GALAXIES: BROAD-LINE ACTIVE GALACTIC NUCLEI IN THE zCOSMOS SURVEY
- (2009) A. Merloni et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- THE GREATER IMPACT OF MERGERS ON THE GROWTH OF MASSIVE GALAXIES: IMPLICATIONS FOR MASS ASSEMBLY AND EVOLUTION SINCEz≃ 1
- (2009) Kevin Bundy et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- INSPIRALLING SUPERMASSIVE BLACK HOLES: A NEW SIGNPOST FOR GALAXY MERGERS
- (2009) Julia M. Comerford et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- GALAXY MERGERS AND DARK MATTER HALO MERGERS IN ΛCDM: MASS, REDSHIFT, AND MASS-RATIO DEPENDENCE
- (2009) Kyle R. Stewart et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- BULGEnANDB/TIN HIGH-MASS GALAXIES: CONSTRAINTS ON THE ORIGIN OF BULGES IN HIERARCHICAL MODELS
- (2009) Tim Weinzirl et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- The structures of distant galaxies - III. The merger history of over 20 000 massive galaxies atz< 1.2
- (2009) Christopher J. Conselice et al. MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
- A candidate sub-parsec supermassive binary black hole system
- (2009) Todd A. Boroson et al. NATURE
- Nuclear Activity in Nearby Galaxies
- (2008) Luis C. Ho Annual Review of Astronomy and Astrophysics
- The Redshift Evolution of Wet, Dry, and Mixed Galaxy Mergers from Close Galaxy Pairs in the DEEP2 Galaxy Redshift Survey
- (2008) Lihwai Lin et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- Toward Precise Constraints on the Growth of Massive Black Holes
- (2008) Qingjuan Yu et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- Biases in Virial Black Hole Masses: An SDSS Perspective
- (2008) Yue Shen et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- Recent Structural Evolution of Early‐Type Galaxies: Size Growth fromz= 1 toz= 0
- (2008) Arjen van der Wel et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- The Evolution of Galaxy Mergers and Morphology atz< 1.2 in the Extended Groth Strip
- (2008) Jennifer M. Lotz et al. ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
- A calibration of the relation between the abundance of close galaxy pairs and the rate of galaxy mergers
- (2008) M. G. Kitzbichler et al. MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
- The structures of distant galaxies – I. Galaxy structures and the merger rate to z ∼ 3 in the Hubble Ultra-Deep Field
- (2008) Christopher J. Conselice et al. MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
- Inclination- and dust-corrected galaxy parameters: bulge-to-disc ratios and size-luminosity relations
- (2008) Alister W. Graham et al. MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
- A massive binary black-hole system in OJ 287 and a test of general relativity
- (2008) M. J. Valtonen et al. NATURE
Create your own webinar
Interested in hosting your own webinar? Check the schedule and propose your idea to the Peeref Content Team.
Create NowAsk a Question. Answer a Question.
Quickly pose questions to the entire community. Debate answers and get clarity on the most important issues facing researchers.
Get Started