Quasars and Active Galactic Nuclei
Quasars and their kin remain among the most fascinating and
mysterious of cosmic phenomena. This collection provides an introduction
to the whole subject of active galactic nuclei. It started as the
WWW version of a slide set produced for the
Astronomical
Society of the Pacific; this is still available as 35mm slides
in their
online catalog. (I don't get royalties for this, but the ASP
is always a worthy recipient of your business). Newcomers may
want to start with an introduction,
note how many colleagues have contributed,
or check for an unfamiliar term in the
glossary. Since the initial
image set, I've added a few more images, often driven by something that
was especially useful in the classroom.
New: An essay on
quasar astronomy after forty years, being the
Director's Cut of an article first written for
Astronomy magazine.
The list below points to images and graphics with detailed captions.
In each case, click on the image for a bigger (and often more legible) version.
General aspects:
Comparing optical spectra of various classes of AGN,
The broadband spectrum of Markarian 421 from 20 cm
to 1 TeV
Variability of active nuclei in the radio, ultraviolet,
and X-ray domains
Seyfert galaxies:
A gallery of Seyfert galaxies
HST closeups of Seyfert nuclei
The broad-band emission spectrum of NGC 4151
A wide view of NGC 1275 and its gaseous filaments
An HST view of the enigmatic nucleus of NGC 1275
Finding the hidden active nucleus of IC 5063 in the infrared
Interactions between jets and gas in NGC 4151
The radio jet and obscuring torus in NGC 1068
The hidden nucleus of NGC 1068 revealed by polarization
Color image of the nearby Seyfert galaxy NGC 1068
Comparison of Seyfert and non-Seyfert nuclei in HST images
Radio galaxies:
Radio structures of radio galaxies
HST closeups of nearby radio galaxies
HST images of high-redshift radio galaxies in the early Universe
The blowtorch jet of NGC 6251
The jet of M87
The nucleus and central mass in M87
Optical jets in four radio galaxies
The nearby powerful radio galaxy Cygnus A
The nearby radio galaxy Centaurus A
The inner and
outer parts of the radio galaxy M87
Quasars:
A typical quasar: PKS 1117-248
The jet of 3C 273
The gravitationally lensed double quasar 0957+561
An HST view of the Einstein Cross 2237+030
The evolution of quasars with cosmic time
Anomalous QSO/galaxy associations and the redshift controversy
Quasars as lighthouses: the Lyman alpha forest at low and high redshifts
The absorbing galaxy seen in front of 3C 196
Quasar host galaxies from HST
Superluminal motion in 3C 279
The hidden quasar nucleus in the ultraluminous infrared
galaxy IRAS 09104+4109
Usage and reproduction:
Want to make copies of these for use in teaching? Feel free with appropriate
acknowledgements - that's what they're here for. Plan to use them
commercially or otherwise make money? That's a bit different - take it up with
ASP director Alex Filippenko, since they're handling the distribution of
the original 35mm slides and
can use all the financial gain they can get. And if you do use these
for classes or presentations, I'd appreciate your
dropping me a note -
I'll feel more motivated next time around if I know that they're actually being
used out there.
Bill Keel's home page |
UA Astronomy image collection |
UA Astronomy
Last updates: November 2002
keel@bildad.astr.ua.edu