论文标题
为什么不管环境和红移无线电大声的类星体都优先广播高音
Why radio quiet quasars are preferred over radio loud quasars regardless of environment and redshift
论文作者
论文摘要
证据已经积累了,表明无线电大型类星体的聚类比无线电静态类星体大。我们在一个环境中解释了这些结果,在这种情况下,对于所有环境和红移,无线电大声的类星体形成的比例小于或等于无线电的Quien Quasars。因为我们假设合并后的冷气对大型黑洞产生了无线电大声或无线电Quien Quasar,所以我们表明,对于生活在最大的暗物质Halos中的最大的黑洞质量,FRLQ从下面开始接近0.5,但并没有超过它,因此,在丰富的簇中,广播响亮的Quasar的形成往往会出现像无线电Quasar的无线电量一样。相比之下,在质量较小的暗物质光环中,无线电安静的类星体更有可能形成,并且可能会随着暗物质光环质量而成年的可能性。结果,平均广播大声和无线电宁静的类星体一定会为无线电安静的亚组产生较低的平均黑洞质量。因此,尽管在任何环境中,在任何质量尺度,任何亮度或红移中,都比无线电大型类星体形成无线电的形成,但平均在一系列无线电大声的类星体上平均会使它们在群集环境中比无线电静音的Quile Quasars更受欢迎。我们展示了这也说明与未搅拌同行相比,喷射活跃星系总数的数量级差异。
Evidence has accumulated suggesting the clustering of radio loud quasars is greater than for radio quiet quasars. We interpret these results in a context in which the fraction of radio loud quasar formation is less than or equal to that for radio quiet quasars for all environments and redshift. Because we assume that post-merger cold gas onto large black holes produces either a radio loud or a radio quiet quasar, we show that for largest black hole masses that live in largest dark matter halos, fRLQ approaches 0.5 from below but does not exceed it, such that in rich clusters the formation of a radio loud quasar tends to be equally likely to occur as a radio quiet quasar. In dark matter halos with smaller mass, by contrast, radio quiet quasars are more likely to form and the likelihood increases inversely with dark matter halo mass. As a result, averaging over a population of radio loud and radio quiet quasars will necessarily generate lower average black hole masses for the radio quiet subgroup. Hence, despite the fact that the formation of radio quiet quasars is preferred over radio loud quasars in any environment, at any mass scale, at any luminosity, or redshift, averaging over a range of radio loud quasars will give the appearance they are preferred in cluster environments over radio quiet quasars. We show how this also accounts for the order of magnitude difference in the total number of jetted active galaxies compared to non-jetted counterparts.