My L. Nguyen
University of Wyoming
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by My L. Nguyen.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2011
Aaron J. Barth; My L. Nguyen; Matthew A. Malkan; Alexei V. Filippenko; Weidong Li; Varoujan Gorjian; Michael D. Joner; Vardha N. Bennert; Janos Botyanszki; S. Bradley Cenko; Michael J. Childress; Jieun Choi; Julia M. Comerford; Antonino Cucciara; Robert L. da Silva; Gaspard Duchene; Michele Fumagalli; Mohan Ganeshalingam; Elinor L. Gates; Brian F. Gerke; Christopher V. Griffith; Chelsea E. Harris; Eric George Bowman Hintz; E. Y. Hsiao; M. T. Kandrashoff; William C. Keel; David Kirkman; I. K. W. Kleiser; C. David Laney; Jeffrey K. Lee
The Seyfert 1 galaxy Zw 229-015 is among the brightest active galaxies being monitored by the Kepler mission. In order to determine the black hole mass in Zw 229-015 from Hβ reverberation mapping, we have carried out nightly observations with the Kast Spectrograph at the Lick 3 m telescope during the dark runs from 2010 June through December, obtaining 54 spectroscopic observations in total. We have also obtained nightly V-band imaging with the Katzman Automatic Imaging Telescope at Lick Observatory and with the 0.9 m telescope at the Brigham Young University West Mountain Observatory over the same period. We detect strong variability in the source, which exhibited more than a factor of two change in broad Hβ flux. From cross-correlation measurements, we find that the Hβ light curve has a rest-frame lag of 3.86+0.69 –0.90 days with respect to the V-band continuum variations. We also measure reverberation lags for Hα and Hγ and find an upper limit to the Hδ lag. Combining the Hβ lag measurement with a broad Hβ width of σline = 1590 ± 47 km s–1 measured from the rms variability spectrum, we obtain a virial estimate of M BH = 1.00+0.19 –0.24 × 107 M ☉ for the black hole in Zw 229-015. As a Kepler target, Zw 229-015 will eventually have one of the highest-quality optical light curves ever measured for any active galaxy, and the black hole mass determined from reverberation mapping will serve as a benchmark for testing relationships between black hole mass and continuum variability characteristics in active galactic nuclei.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2013
Suchetana Chatterjee; My L. Nguyen; Adam D. Myers; Zheng Zheng
Recent work on quasar clustering suggests a degeneracy in the halo occupation distribution constrained from two-point correlation functions. To break this degeneracy, we make the first empirical measurement of the mean occupation function (MOF) of quasars at z ~ 0.2 by matching quasar positions with groups and clusters identified in the MaxBCG sample. We fit two models to the MOF, a power law and a four-parameter model. The number distribution of quasars in host halos is close to Poisson, and the slopes of the MOF obtained from our best-fit models (for the power-law case) favor an MOF that monotonically increases with halo mass. The best-fit slopes are 0.53 ± 0.04 and 1.03 ± 1.12 for the power-law model and the four-parameter model, respectively. We measure the radial distribution of quasars within dark matter halos and find it to be adequately described by a power law with a slope –2.3 ± 0.4. We measure the conditional luminosity function (CLF) of quasars and show that there is no evidence that quasar luminosity depends on host halo mass, similar to the inferences drawn from clustering measurements. We also measure the conditional black hole mass function (CMF) of our quasars. Although the results are consistent with no dependence on halo mass, we observe a slight indication of downsizing of the black hole mass function. The lack of halo mass dependence in the CLF and CMF shows that quasars residing in galaxy clusters have characteristic luminosity and black hole mass scales.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2018
M. Fausnaugh; D. Starkey; K. Horne; C. S. Kochanek; Bradley M. Peterson; Misty C. Bentz; K. D. Denney; C. J. Grier; Dirk Grupe; Richard W. Pogge; G. De Rosa; S. M. Adams; Aaron J. Barth; Thomas G. Beatty; A. Bhattacharjee; G. A. Borman; Todd A. Boroson; Mark Clinton Bottorff; Jacob E. Brown; J. S. Brown; Michael S. Brotherton; Carl T. Coker; S. M. Crawford; K. V. Croxall; Sarah Eftekharzadeh; Michael Eracleous; Michael D. Joner; C. B. Henderson; T. W.-S. Holoien; T. Hutchison
We present optical continuum lags for two Seyfert 1 galaxies, MCG+08-11-011 and NGC 2617, using monitoring data from a reverberation mapping campaign carried out in 2014. Our light curves span the ugriz filters over four months, with median cadences of 1.0 and 0.6 days for MCG+08-11-011 and NGC 2617, respectively, combined with roughly daily X-ray and near-UV data from Swift for NGC 2617. We find lags consistent with geometrically thin accretion-disk models that predict a lag-wavelength relation of τ ∝ λ^(4/3). However, the observed lags are larger than predictions based on standard thin-disk theory by factors of 3.3 for MCG+08-11-011 and 2.3 for NGC 2617. These differences can be explained if the mass accretion rates are larger than inferred from the optical luminosity by a factor of 4.3 in MCG+08-11-011 and a factor of 1.3 in NGC 2617, although uncertainty in the SMBH masses determines the significance of this result. While the X-ray variability in NGC 2617 precedes the UV/optical variability, the long (2.6 day) lag is problematic for coronal reprocessing models.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2012
Jeffrey M. Silverman; Mohan Ganeshalingam; S. Bradley Cenko; Alexei V. Filippenko; Weidong Li; Aaron J. Barth; Daniel J. Carson; Michael J. Childress; Kelsey I. Clubb; Antonino Cucchiara; Melissa Lynn Graham; G. H. Marion; My L. Nguyen; L. Pei; Brad E. Tucker; Jozsef Vinko; J. Craig Wheeler; Gabor Worseck
The Astrophysical Journal | 2014
L. Pei; Aaron J. Barth; G. Aldering; Michael M. Briley; Carla June Carroll; Daniel J. Carson; S. Bradley Cenko; Kelsey I. Clubb; Daniel P. Cohen; Antonino Cucchiara; Tyler D. Desjardins; Rick Edelson; Jerome J. Fang; Joseph M. Fedrow; Alexei V. Filippenko; Ori D. Fox; Amy Furniss; Elinor L. Gates; Michael D. Gregg; Scott Gustafson; J. Chuck Horst; Michael D. Joner; Patrick L. Kelly; Mark Lacy; C. David Laney; Douglas C. Leonard; Weidong Li; Matthew A. Malkan; Bruce Margon; Marcel Neeleman
The Astrophysical Journal | 2017
M. Fausnaugh; C. J. Grier; Misty C. Bentz; K. D. Denney; G. De Rosa; Bradley M. Peterson; C. S. Kochanek; Richard W. Pogge; S. M. Adams; Aaron J. Barth; Thomas G. Beatty; A. Bhattacharjee; G. A. Borman; Todd A. Boroson; Mark Clinton Bottorff; Jacob E. Brown; J. S. Brown; Michael S. Brotherton; Carl T. Coker; S. M. Crawford; K. V. Croxall; Sarah Eftekharzadeh; Michael Eracleous; Michael D. Joner; C. B. Henderson; T. W.-S. Holoien; K. Horne; T. Hutchison; Shai Kaspi; Sang Chul Kim
The Astrophysical Journal | 2014
L. Pei; Aaron J. Barth; G. Aldering; Michael M. Briley; Carla June Carroll; Daniel J. Carson; S. Bradley Cenko; Kelsey I. Clubb; Daniel P. Cohen; Antonino Cucchiara; Tyler D. Desjardins; R. Edelson; Jerome J. Fang; Joseph M. Fedrow; Alexei V. Filippenko; Ori D. Fox; A. Furniss; Elinor L. Gates; Michael D. Gregg; Scott Gustafson; J. Chuck Horst; Michael D. Joner; Patrick L. Kelly; Mark Lacy; C. David Laney; Douglas C. Leonard; Weidong Li; Matthew A. Malkan; Bruce Margon; Marcel Neeleman
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2014
My L. Nguyen; Suchetana Chatterjee; Adam D. Myers; Zheng Zheng; Eduardo Rozo; E. S. Rykoff
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2013
My L. Nguyen; Suchetana Chatterjee; Adam D. Myers
Archive | 2012
Jeffrey M. Silverman; Mohan Ganeshalingam; S. Bradley Cenko; Alexei V. Filippenko; Weidong Li; Aaron J. Barth; Daniel J. Carson; Michael J. Childress; Kelsey I. Clubb; Antonino Cucchiara; Melissa Lynn Graham; G. H. Marion; My L. Nguyen; L. Pei; Brad E. Tucker; Jozsef Vinko; J. Craig Wheeler; Gabor Worseck