Normalized to: ..
[1]
oai:arXiv.org:1509.02702 [pdf] - 1275531
Italian Science Case for ALMA Band 2+3
Beltran, M. T.;
Bianchi, E.;
Brand, J.;
Casasola, V.;
Cesaroni, R.;
Codella, C.;
Fontani, F.;
Gregorini, L.;
Guidi, G.;
Hunt, L.;
Liuzzo, E.;
Marconi, A.;
Massardi, M.;
Moscadelli, L.;
Paladino, R.;
Podio, L.;
Prandoni, I.;
Rygl, K. L. J.;
Rivilla, V.;
.;
Testi, L.
Submitted: 2015-09-09, last modified: 2015-09-11
The Premiale Project "Science and Technology in Italy for the upgraded ALMA
Observatory - iALMA" has the goal of strengthening the scientific,
technological and industrial Italian contribution to the Atacama Large
Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), the largest ground based international
infrastructure for the study of the Universe in the microwave. One of the main
objectives of the Science Working Group (SWG) inside iALMA, the Work Package 1,
is to develop the Italian contribution to the Science Case for the ALMA Band 2
or Band 2+3 receiver. ALMA Band 2 receiver spans from ~67 GHz (bounded by an
opaque line complex of ozone lines) up to 90 GHz which overlaps with the lower
frequency end of ALMA Band 3. Receiver technology has advanced since the
original definition of the ALMA frequency bands. It is now feasible to produce
a single receiver which could cover the whole frequency range from 67 GHz to
116 GHz, encompassing Band 2 and Band 3 in a single receiver cartridge, a so
called Band 2+3 system. In addition, upgrades of the ALMA system are now
foreseen that should double the bandwidth to 16 GHz. The science drivers
discussed below therefore also discuss the advantages of these two enhancements
over the originally foreseen Band 2 system.
[2]
oai:arXiv.org:1508.06696 [pdf] - 1281025
Further constraints on the optical transmission spectrum of HAT-P-1b
Submitted: 2015-08-26
We report on novel observations of HAT-P-1 aimed at constraining the optical
transmission spectrum of the atmosphere of its transiting Hot-Jupiter
exoplanet. Ground-based differential spectrophotometry was performed over two
transit windows using the DOLORES spectrograph at the Telescopio Nazionale
Galileo (TNG). Our measurements imply an average planet to star radius ratio
equal to $\rm R_p/R_{\star}$=(0.1159$\pm$0.0005). This result is consistent
with the value obtained from recent near infrared measurements of this object
but differs from previously reported optical measurements being lower by around
4.4 exoplanet scale heights. Analyzing the data over 5 different spectral bins
600\AA$\,$ wide we observed a single peaked spectrum (3.7 $\rm\sigma$ level)
with a blue cut-off corresponding to the blue edge of the broad absorption wing
of sodium and an increased absorption in the region in between 6180-7400\AA. We
also infer that the width of the broad absorption wings due to alkali metals is
likely narrower than the one implied by solar abundance clear atmospheric
models. We interpret the result as evidence that HAT-P-1b has a partially clear
atmosphere at optical wavelengths with a more modest contribution from an
optical absorber than previously reported.
[3]
oai:arXiv.org:1506.04466 [pdf] - 1176033
Pre- and Post-burst Radio Observations of the Class 0 Protostar HOPS 383
in Orion
Submitted: 2015-06-14
There is increasing evidence that episodic accretion is a common phenomenon
in Young Stellar Objects (YSOs). Recently, the source HOPS 383 in Orion was
reported to have a $\times 35$ mid-infrared -- and bolometric -- luminosity
increase between 2004 and 2008, constituting the first clear example of a class
0 YSO (a protostar) with a large accretion burst. The usual assumption that in
YSOs accretion and ejection follow each other in time needs to be tested. Radio
jets at centimeter wavelengths are often the only way of tracing the jets from
embedded protostars. We searched the Very Large Array archive for the available
observations of the radio counterpart of HOPS 383. The data show that the radio
flux of HOPS 383 varies only mildly from January 1998 to December 2014, staying
at the level of $\sim 200$ to 300 $\mu$Jy in the X band ($\sim 9$ GHz), with a
typical uncertainty of 10 to 20 $\mu$Jy in each measurement. We interpret the
absence of a radio burst as suggesting that accretion and ejection enhancements
do not follow each other in time, at least not within timescales shorter than a
few years. Time monitoring of more objects and specific predictions from
simulations are needed to clarify the details of the connection betwen
accretion and jets/winds in YSOs.
[4]
oai:arXiv.org:1504.01342 [pdf] - 1055912
Testing the cooling flow model in the intermediate polar EX Hydrae
Submitted: 2015-04-06, last modified: 2015-05-04
We use the best available X-ray data from the intermediate polar EX Hydrae to
study the cooling-flow model often applied to interpret the X-ray spectra of
these accreting magnetic white dwarf binaries. First, we resolve a
long-standing discrepancy between the X-ray and optical determinations of the
mass of the white dwarf in EX Hya by applying new models of the inner disk
truncation radius. Our fits to the X-ray spectrum now agree with the white
dwarf mass of 0.79 M$_{\odot}$sun determined using dynamical methods through
spectroscopic observations of the secondary. We use a simple isobaric cooling
flow model to derive the emission line fluxes, emission measure distribution,
and H-like to He-like line ratios for comparison with the 496 ks Chandra High
Energy Transmission Grating observation of EX Hydrae. We find that the H/He
ratios are not well reproduced by this simple isobaric cooling flow model and
show that while H-like line fluxes can be accurately predicted, fluxes of
lower-Z He-like lines are significantly underestimated. This discrepancy
suggests that some extra heating mechanism plays an important role at the base
of the accretion column, where cooler ions form. We thus explored more complex
cooling models including the change of gravitational potential with height in
the accretion column and a magnetic dipole geometry. None of these
modifications to the standard cooling flow model are able to reproduce the
observed line ratios. While a cooling flow model with subsolar (0.1 $\odot$)
abundances is able to reproduce the line ratios by reducing the cooling rate at
temperatures lower than $\sim 10^{7.3}$ K, the predicted line-to-continuum
ratios are much lower than observed. We discuss and discard mechanisms such as
photoionization, departures from constant pressure, resonant scattering,
different electron-ion temperatures, and Compton cooling. [Abridged]
[5]
oai:arXiv.org:1501.02953 [pdf] - 1223993
Hubble Space Telescope observations of the Kepler-field cluster NGC
6819. I. The bottom of the white dwarf cooling sequence
Submitted: 2015-01-13
We use Hubble Space Telescope (HST) to reach the end of the white dwarf (WD)
cooling sequence (CS) in the solar-metallicity open cluster NGC 6819. Our
photometry and completeness tests show a sharp drop in the number of WDs along
the CS at magnitudes fainter than mF606W = 26.050+/- 0.075. This implies an age
of 2.25+/-0.20 Gyr, consistent with the age of 2.25+/-0.30 Gyr obtained from
fits to the main-sequence turn-off. The use of different WD cooling models and
initial-final-mass relations have a minor impact the WD age estimate, at the
level of ~0.1 Gyr. As an important by-product of this investigation we also
release, in electronic format, both the catalogue of all the detected sources
and the atlases of the region (in two filters). Indeed, this patch of sky
studied by HST (of size ~70 arcmin sq.) is entirely within the main
Kepler-mission field, so the high-resolution images and deep catalogues will be
particularly useful.
[6]
oai:arXiv.org:1410.7456 [pdf] - 1222832
Legacy ExtraGalactic UV Survey (LEGUS) with The Hubble Space Telescope.
I. Survey Description
Calzetti, D.;
Lee, J. C.;
Sabbi, E.;
Adamo, A.;
Smith, L. J.;
Andrews, J. E.;
Ubeda, L.;
Bright, S. N.;
Thilker, D.;
Aloisi, A.;
Brown, T. M.;
Chandar, R.;
Christian, C.;
Cignoni, M.;
Clayton, G. C.;
da Silva, R.;
de Mink, S. E.;
Dobbs, C.;
Elmegreen, B. G.;
Elmegreen, D. M.;
Evans, A. S.;
Fumagalli, M.;
Gallagher, J. S.;
Gouliermis, D. A.;
Grebel, E. K.;
Herrero, A.;
Hunter, D. A.;
Johnson, K. E.;
Kennicutt, R. C.;
Kim, H.;
Krumholz, M. R.;
Lennon, D.;
Levay, K.;
Martin, C.;
Nair, P.;
Nota, A.;
Oestlin, G.;
Pellerin, A.;
Prieto, J.;
Regan, M. W.;
Ryon, J. E.;
Schaerer, D.;
Schiminovich, D.;
Tosi, M.;
Van Dyk, S. D.;
Walterbos, R.;
Whitmore, B. C.;
Wofford, A.;
.
Submitted: 2014-10-27
The Legacy ExtraGalactic UV Survey (LEGUS) is a Cycle 21 Treasury program on
the Hubble Space Telescope, aimed at the investigation of star formation and
its relation with galactic environment in nearby galaxies, from the scales of
individual stars to those of ~kpc-size clustered structures. Five-band imaging,
from the near-ultraviolet to the I-band, with the Wide Field Camera 3, plus
parallel optical imaging with the Advanced Camera for Surveys, is being
collected for selected pointings of 50 galaxies within the local 12 Mpc. The
filters used for the observations with the Wide Field Camera 3 are: F275W(2,704
A), F336W(3,355 A), F438W(4,325 A), F555W(5,308 A), and F814W(8,024 A); the
parallel observations with the Advanced Camera for Surveys use the filters:
F435W(4,328 A), F606W(5,921 A), and F814W(8,057 A). The multi-band images are
yielding accurate recent (<~50 Myr) star formation histories from resolved
massive stars and the extinction-corrected ages and masses of star clusters and
associations. The extensive inventories of massive stars and clustered systems
will be used to investigate the spatial and temporal evolution of star
formation within galaxies. This will, in turn, inform theories of galaxy
evolution and improve the understanding of the physical underpinning of the
gas-star formation relation and the nature of star formation at high redshift.
This paper describes the survey, its goals and observational strategy, and the
initial science results. Because LEGUS will provide a reference survey and a
foundation for future observations with JWST and with ALMA, a large number of
data products are planned for delivery to the community.
[7]
oai:arXiv.org:1409.7110 [pdf] - 885187
Constraints on photoevaporation models from (lack of) radio emission in
the Corona Australis protoplanetary disks
GalvÓÅn-Madrid, Roberto;
Liu, Hauyu Baobab;
Manara, Carlo Felice;
Forbrich, Jan;
Pascucci, Ilaria;
Carrasco-GonzÓÅlez, Carlos;
Goddi, Ciriaco;
Hasegawa, Yasuhiro;
Takami, Michihiro;
Testi, Leonardo;
.
Submitted: 2014-09-24
Photoevaporation due to high-energy stellar photons is thought to be one of
the main drivers of protoplanetary disk dispersal. The fully or partially
ionized disk surface is expected to produce free-free continuum emission at
centimeter (cm) wavelengths that can be routinely detected with interferometers
such as the upgraded Very Large Array (VLA). We use deep (rms noise down to 8
$\mu$Jy beam$^{-1}$ in the field of view center) 3.5 cm maps of the nearby (130
pc) Corona Australis (CrA) star formation (SF) region to constrain disk
photoevaporation models. We find that the radio emission from disk sources in
CrA is surprisingly faint. Only 3 out of 10 sources within the field of view
are detected, with flux densities of order $10^2$ $\mu$Jy. However, a
significant fraction of their emission is non-thermal. Typical upper limits for
non-detections are $3\sigma\sim 60~\mu$Jy beam$^{-1}$. Assuming analytic
expressions for the free-free emission from extreme-UV (EUV) irradiation, we
derive stringent upper limits to the ionizing photon luminosity impinging on
the disk surface $\Phi_\mathrm{EUV}<1-4\times10^{41}$ s$^{-1}$. These limits
constrain $\Phi_\mathrm{EUV}$ to the low end of the values needed by EUV-driven
photoevaporation models to clear protoplanetary disks in the observed few Myr
timescale. Therefore, at least in CrA, EUV-driven photoevaporation is not
likely to be the main agent of disk dispersal. We also compare the observed
X-ray luminosities $L_X$ of disk sources with models in which photoevaporation
is driven by such photons. Although predictions are less specific than for the
EUV case, most of the observed fluxes (upper limits) are roughly consistent
with the (scaled) predictions. Deeper observations, as well as predictions
spanning a wider parameter space, are needed to properly test X-ray driven
photoevaporation.
[8]
oai:arXiv.org:1407.0996 [pdf] - 1215386
Molecular gas associated with IRAS 10361-5830
Submitted: 2014-07-03
We analyze the distribution of the molecular gas and the dust in the
molecular clump linked to IRAS 10361-5830, located in the environs of the
bubble-shaped HII region Gum 31 in the Carina region, with the aim of
determining the main parameters of the associated material and investigating
the evolutionary state of the young stellar objects identified there.
Using the APEX telescope, we mapped the molecular emission in the J=3-2
transition of three CO isotopologues, 12CO, 13CO and C18O, over a 1.5' x 1.5'
region around the IRAS position. We also observed the high density tracers CS
and HCO+ toward the source. The cold dust distribution was analyzed using
submillimeter continuum data at 870 \mu\ obtained with the APEX telescope.
Complementary IR and radio data at different wavelengths were used to complete
the study of the ISM.
The molecular gas distribution reveals a cavity and a shell-like structure of
~ 0.32 pc in radius centered at the position of the IRAS source, with some
young stellar objects (YSOs) projected onto the cavity. The total molecular
mass in the shell and the mean H$_2$ volume density are ~ 40 solar masses and
~(1-2) x 10$^3$ cm$^{-3}$, respectively. The cold dust counterpart of the
molecular shell has been detected in the far-IR at 870 \mu\ and in Herschel
data at 350 \mu. Weak extended emission at 24 \mu\ from warm dust is projected
onto the cavity, as well as weak radio continuum emission.
A comparison of the distribution of cold and warm dust, and molecular and
ionized gas allows us to conclude that a compact HII region has developed in
the molecular clump, indicating that this is an area of recent massive star
formation. Probable exciting sources capable of creating the compact HII region
are investigated. The 2MASS source 10380461-5846233 (MSX G286.3773-00.2563)
seems to be responsible for the formation of the HII region.
[9]
oai:arXiv.org:1403.7534 [pdf] - 1208693
Multifrequency Studies of the Peculiar Quasar 4C +21.35 During the 2010
Flaring Activity
Ackermann, M.;
Ajello, M.;
Allafort, A.;
Antolini, E.;
Barbiellini, G.;
Bastieri, D.;
Bellazzini, R.;
Bissaldi, E.;
Bonamente, E.;
Bregeon, J.;
Brigida, M.;
Bruel, P.;
Buehler, R.;
Buson, S.;
Caliandro, G. A.;
Cameron, R. A.;
Caraveo, P. A.;
Cavazzuti, E.;
Cecchi, C.;
Chaves, R. C. G.;
Chekhtman, A.;
Chiang, J.;
Chiaro, G.;
Ciprini, S.;
Claus, R.;
Cohen-Tanugi, J.;
Conrad, J.;
Cutini, S.;
D'Ammando, F.;
de Palma, F.;
Dermer, C. D.;
Silva, E. do Couto e;
Donato, D.;
Drell, P. S.;
Favuzzi, C.;
Finke, J.;
Focke, W. B.;
Franckowiak, A.;
Fukazawa, Y.;
Fusco, P.;
Gargano, F.;
Gasparrini, D.;
Gehrels, N.;
Giglietto, N.;
Giordano, F.;
Giroletti, M.;
Godfrey, G.;
Grenier, I. A.;
Guiriec, S.;
Hayashida, M.;
Hewitt, J. W.;
Horan, D.;
Hughes, R. E.;
Iafrate, G.;
Johnson, A. S.;
Knodlseder, J.;
Kuss, M.;
Lande, J.;
Larsson, S.;
Latronico, L.;
Longo, F.;
Loparco, F.;
Lovellette, M. N.;
Lubrano, P.;
Mayer, M.;
Mazziotta, M. N.;
McEnery, J. E.;
Michelson, P. F.;
Mizuno, T.;
Monzani, M. E.;
Morselli, A.;
Moskalenko, I. V.;
Murgia, S.;
Nemmen, R.;
Nuss, E.;
Ohsugi, T.;
Orienti, M.;
Orlando, E.;
Perkins, J. S.;
Pesce-Rollins, M.;
Piron, F.;
Pivato, G.;
Porter, T. A.;
RainÓÂ, S.;
Razzano, M.;
Reimer, A.;
Reimer, O.;
Sanchez, D. A.;
Schulz, A.;
SgrÓÂ, C.;
Siskind, E. J.;
Spandre, G.;
Spinelli, P.;
Stawarz, L.;
Takahashi, H.;
Takahashi, T.;
Thayer, J. G.;
Thayer, J. B.;
Thompson, D. J.;
Tinivella, M.;
Torres, D. F.;
Tosti, G.;
Troja, E.;
Usher, T. L.;
Vandenbroucke, J.;
Vasileiou, V.;
Vianello, G.;
Vitale, V.;
Werner, M.;
Winer, B. L.;
Wood, D. L.;
Wood, K. S.;
Aleksic, J.;
Ansoldi, S.;
Antonelli, L. A.;
Antoranz, P.;
Babic, A.;
Bangale, P.;
de Almeida, U. Barres;
Barrio, J. A.;
Gonzalez, J. Becerra;
Bednarek, W.;
Berger, K.;
Bernardini, E.;
Biland, A.;
Blanch, O.;
Bock, R. K.;
Bonnefoy, S.;
Bonnoli, G.;
Borracci, F.;
Bretz, T.;
Carmona, E.;
Carosi, A.;
Fidalgo, D. Carreto;
Colin, P.;
Colombo, E.;
Contreras, J. L.;
Cortina, J.;
Covino, S.;
Da Vela, P.;
Dazzi, F.;
De Angelis, A.;
De Caneva, G.;
De Lotto, B.;
Mendez, C. Delgado;
Doert, M.;
Dominguez, A.;
Prester, D. Dominis;
Dorner, D.;
Doro, M.;
Einecke, S.;
Eisenacher, D.;
Elsaesser, D.;
Farina, E.;
Ferenc, D.;
Fonseca, M. V.;
Font, L.;
Frantzen, K.;
Fruck, C.;
Lopez, R. J. Garcia;
Garczarczyk, M.;
Terrats, D. Garrido;
Gaug, M.;
Giavitto, G.;
Godinovic, N.;
Munoz, A. Gonzalez;
Gozzini, S. R.;
Hadasch, D.;
Herrero, A.;
Hildebrand, D.;
Hose, J.;
Hrupec, D.;
Idec, W.;
Kadenius, V.;
Kellermann, H.;
Knoetig, M. L.;
Kodani, K.;
Konno, Y.;
Krause, J.;
Kubo, H.;
Kushida, J.;
La Barbera, A.;
Lelas, D.;
Lewandowska, N.;
Lindfors, E.;
Lombardi, S.;
Lopez, M.;
Lopez-Coto, R.;
Lopez-Oramas, A.;
Lorenz, E.;
Lozano, I.;
Makariev, M.;
Mallot, K.;
Maneva, G.;
Mankuzhiyil, N.;
Mannheim, K.;
Maraschi, L.;
Marcote, B.;
Mariotti, M.;
Martinez, M.;
Mazin, D.;
Menzel, U.;
Meucci, M.;
Miranda, J. M.;
Mirzoyan, R.;
Moralejo, A.;
Munar-Adrover, P.;
Nakajima, D.;
Niedzwiecki, A.;
Nishijima, K.;
Nilsson, K.;
Nowak, N.;
Orito, R.;
Overkemping, A.;
Paiano, S.;
Palatiello, M.;
Paneque, D.;
Paoletti, R.;
Paredes, J. M.;
Paredes-Fortuny, X.;
Partini, S.;
Persic, M.;
Prada, F.;
Moroni, P. G. Prada;
Prandini, E.;
Preziuso, S.;
Puljak, I.;
Reinthal, R.;
Rhode, W.;
Ribo, M.;
Rico, J.;
Garcia, J. Rodriguez;
Rugamer, S.;
Saggion, A.;
Saito, T.;
Saito, K.;
Salvati, M.;
Satalecka, K.;
Scalzotto, V.;
Scapin, V.;
Schultz, C.;
Schweizer, T.;
Shore, S. N.;
Sillanpaa, A.;
Sitarek, J.;
Snidaric, I.;
Sobczynska, D.;
Spanier, F.;
Stamatescu, V.;
Stamerra, A.;
Steinbring, T.;
Storz, J.;
Sun, S.;
Suric, T.;
Takalo, L.;
Takami, H.;
Tavecchio, F.;
Temnikov, P.;
Terzic, T.;
Tescaro, D.;
Teshima, M.;
Thaele, J.;
Tibolla, O.;
Toyama, T.;
Treves, A.;
Vogler, P.;
Wagner, R. M.;
Zandanel, F.;
Zanin, R.;
Aller, M. F.;
Angelakis, E.;
Blinov, D. A.;
Djorgovski, S. G.;
Drake, A. J.;
Efimova, N. V.;
Gurwell, M. A.;
Homan, D. C.;
Jordan, B.;
Kopatskaya, E. N.;
Kovalev, Y. Y.;
Kurtanidze, O. M.;
Lahteenmaki, A.;
Larionov, V. M.;
Lister, M. L.;
Nieppola, E.;
Nikolashvili, M. G.;
Ros, E.;
Savolainen, T.;
Sigua, L. A.;
Tornikoski, M.;
.
Submitted: 2014-03-28, last modified: 2014-06-27
The discovery of rapidly variable Very High Energy (VHE; E > 100 GeV)
gamma-ray emission from 4C +21.35 (PKS 1222+216) by MAGIC on 2010 June 17,
triggered by the high activity detected by the Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT)
in high energy (HE; E > 100 MeV) gamma-rays, poses intriguing questions on the
location of the gamma-ray emitting region in this flat spectrum radio quasar.
We present multifrequency data of 4C +21.35 collected from centimeter to VHE
during 2010 to investigate the properties of this source and discuss a possible
emission model. The first hint of detection at VHE was observed by MAGIC on
2010 May 3, soon after a gamma-ray flare detected by Fermi-LAT that peaked on
April 29. The same emission mechanism may therefore be responsible for both the
HE and VHE emission during the 2010 flaring episodes. Two optical peaks were
detected on 2010 April 20 and June 30, close in time but not simultaneous with
the two gamma-ray peaks, while no clear connection was observed between the
X-ray an gamma-ray emission. An increasing flux density was observed in radio
and mm bands from the beginning of 2009, in accordance with the increasing
gamma-ray activity observed by Fermi-LAT, and peaking on 2011 January 27 in the
mm regime (230 GHz). We model the spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of 4C
+21.35 for the two periods of the VHE detection and a quiescent state, using a
one-zone model with the emission coming from a very compact region outside the
broad line region. The three SEDs can be fit with a combination of synchrotron
self-Compton and external Compton emission of seed photons from a dust torus,
changing only the electron distribution parameters between the epochs. The fit
of the optical/UV part of the spectrum for 2010 April 29 seems to favor an
inner disk radius of <6 gravitational radii, as one would expect from a
prograde-rotating Kerr black hole.
[10]
oai:arXiv.org:1405.7070 [pdf] - 873843
On the properties of the interstellar medium in extremely metal-poor
blue compact dwarf galaxies: GMOS-IFU spectroscopy and SDSS photometry of the
double-knot galaxy HS 2236+1344
Submitted: 2014-05-27
The main goal of this study is to carry out a spatially resolved
investigation of the warm interstellar medium (ISM) in the extremely metal-poor
Blue Compact Dwarf (BCD) galaxy HS 2236+1344. Special emphasis is laid on the
analysis of the spatial distribution of chemical abundances, emission-line
ratios and kinematics of the ISM, and to the recent star-forming activity in
this galaxy. This study is based on optical integral field unit spectroscopy
data from Gemini Multi-Object Spectrograph at the Gemini North telescope and
archival Sloan Digital Sky Survey images. The data were obtained in two
different positions across the galaxy, obtaining a total 4 arcsec X 8 arcsec
field which encompasses most of its ISM. Emission-line maps and broad-band
images obtained in this study indicate that HS 2236+1344 hosts three Giant HII
regions. Our data also reveal some faint curved features in the BCD periphery
that might be due to tidal perturbations or expanding ionized-gas shells. The
ISM velocity field shows systematic gradients along the major axis of the BCD,
with its south-eastern and north-western half differing by ~80 km/s in their
recessional velocity. The Ha and Hb equivalent width distribution in the
central part of HS 2236+1344 is consistent with a very young (~3 Myr) burst.
Our surface photometry analysis indicates that the ongoing starburst provides
~50% of the total optical emission, similar to other BCDs. It also reveals an
underlying lower-surface brightness component with moderately red colors, which
suggest that the galaxy has undergone previous star formation. We derive an
integrated oxygen abundance of 12+log(O/H)=7.53\pm0.06 and a nitrogen-to-oxygen
ratio of log(N/O)=-1.57\pm0.19. Our results are consistent, within the
uncertainties, with a homogeneous distribution of oxygen and nitrogen within
the ISM of the galaxy. (abridged)
[11]
oai:arXiv.org:1404.0301 [pdf] - 1208743
The Luminosity Function of Star Clusters in 20 Star-Forming Galaxies
Based on Hubble Legacy Archive Photometry
Submitted: 2014-04-01
Luminosity functions have been determined for star cluster populations in 20
nearby (4-30 Mpc), star-forming galaxies based on ACS source lists generated by
the Hubble Legacy Archive. Comparisons are made with other recently generated
cluster catalogs demonstrating that the HLA-generated catalogs are of similar
quality, but in general do not go as deep. A typical cluster luminosity
function can be approximated by a power-law, $dN/dL\propto L^{\alpha}$, with an
average value for $\alpha$ of $-2.37$ and RMS scatter = 0.18 when using the
F814W ("$I$") band. We find that galaxies with high rates of star formation (or
equivalently, with the brightest or largest numbers of clusters) have a slight
tendency to have shallower values of $\alpha$. In particular, the Antennae
galaxy (NGC4038/39), a merging system with a relatively high star formation
rate, has the second flattest luminosity function in the sample. A tentative
correlation may also be present between Hubble Type and values of $\alpha$, in
the sense that later type galaxies (i.e., Sd and Sm) appear to have flatter
luminosity functions. Hence, while there do appear to be some weak
correlations, the relative similarity in the values of $\alpha$ for a large
number of star-forming galaxies suggests that, to first order, the LFs are
fairly universal. We examine the bright end of the luminosity functions and
find evidence for a downturn, although it only pertains to about 1% of the
clusters. Our uniform database results in a small scatter ($\approx$0.4 to 0.5
mag) in the correlation between the magnitude of the brightest cluster
($M_\mathrm{brightest}$) and log of the number of clusters brighter than
$M_{I}=-9$ (log N). We also examine the magnitude of the brightest cluster vs.
log SFR for a sample including both dwarfs galaxies and ULIRGS.
[12]
oai:arXiv.org:1403.2430 [pdf] - 800201
Evolution induced by dry minor mergers onto fast-rotator S0 galaxies
Tapia, Trinidad;
Eliche-Moral, M. Carmen;
Querejeta, Miguel;
Balcells, Marc;
GonzÓÅlez-GarcÓ-a, A. CÓ?sar;
Prieto, Mercedes;
Aguerri, J. Alfonso L.;
Gallego, JesÓÊs;
Zamorano, Jaime;
RodrÓ-guez-PÓ?rez, Cristina;
Borlaff, Alejandro;
.
Submitted: 2014-03-10, last modified: 2014-03-21
We analysed collisionless N-body simulations of intermediate and minor dry
mergers onto S0s to test whether these mergers can generate S0 galaxies with
kinematics intermediate between fast and slow rotators. We find that minor
mergers induce a lower decrease of the global rotational support than
encounters of lower mass ratios, which results in S0s with properties
intermediate between fast and slow rotators. The resulting remnants are
intrinsically more triaxial, less flattened, and span the whole range of
apparent ellipticities up to $\epsilon_\mathrm{e} \sim 0.8$. They do not show
lower apparent ellipticities in random projections than initially; on the
contrary, the formation of oval distortions and the disc thickening increase
the percentage of projections at $0.4 < \epsilon_\mathrm{e} < 0.7$. In the
experiments with S0b progenitor galaxies, minor mergers tend to spin up the
bulge and to decrease slightly its intrinsic ellipticity, whereas in the cases
of primary S0c galaxies they keep the rotational support of the bulge nearly
constant and decrease significantly its intrinsic ellipticity. The remnant
bulges remain nearly spherical ($B/A \sim C/A > 0.9$), but exhibit a wide range
of triaxialities ($0.20 < T < 1.00$). In the plane of global anisotropy of
velocities ($\delta$) vs. intrinsic ellipticity ($\epsilon_\mathrm{e,intr}$),
some of our models extend the linear trend found in previous major merger
simulations towards higher $\epsilon_\mathrm{e,intr}$ values, while others
depart from it. This is consistent with the wide dispersion exhibited by real
S0s in this diagram compared with ellipticals, which follow the linear trend
drawn by major merger simulations. The different trends exhibited by
ellipticals and S0 galaxies in the $\delta$ - $\epsilon_\mathrm{e}$ diagram may
be pointing to the different role played by major mergers in the build-up of
each morphological type.
[13]
oai:arXiv.org:1310.8500 [pdf] - 793127
Contemporaneous observations of the radio galaxy NGC 1275 from radio to
very high energy gamma-rays
MAGIC Collaboration;
AleksiÔ?, J.;
Ansoldi, S.;
Antonelli, L. A.;
Antoranz, P.;
Babic, A.;
Bangale, P.;
de Almeida, U. Barres;
Barrio, J. A.;
GonzÓÅlez, J. Becerra;
Bednarek, W.;
Berger, K.;
Bernardini, E.;
Biland, A.;
Blanch, O.;
Bock, R. K.;
Bonnefoy, S.;
Bonnoli, G.;
Borracci, F.;
Bretz, T.;
Carmona, E.;
Carosi, A.;
Fidalgo, D. Carreto;
Colin, P.;
Colombo, E.;
Contreras, J. L.;
Cortina, J.;
Covino, S.;
Da Vela, P.;
Dazzi, F.;
De Angelis, A.;
De Caneva, G.;
De Lotto, B.;
Mendez, C. Delgado;
Doert, M.;
DomÓ-nguez, A.;
Prester, D. Dominis;
Dorner, D.;
Doro, M.;
Einecke, S.;
Eisenacher, D.;
Elsaesser, D.;
Farina, E.;
Ferenc, D.;
Fonseca, M. V.;
Font, L.;
Frantzen, K.;
Fruck, C.;
LÓÃpez, R. J. GarcÓ-a;
Garczarczyk, M.;
Terrats, D. Garrido;
Gaug, M.;
Giavitto, G.;
GodinoviÔ?, N.;
MuÓÁoz, A. GonzÓÅlez;
Gozzini, S. R.;
Hadamek, A.;
Hadasch, D.;
Herrero, A.;
Hildebrand, D.;
Hose, J.;
Hrupec, D.;
Idec, W.;
Kadenius, V.;
Kellermann, H.;
Knoetig, M. L.;
Krause, J.;
Kushida, J.;
La Barbera, A.;
Lelas, D.;
Lewandowska, N.;
Lindfors, E.;
Lombardi, S.;
LÓÃpez, M.;
LÓÃpez-Coto, R.;
LÓÃpez-Oramas, A.;
Lorenz, E.;
Lozano, I.;
Makariev, M.;
Mallot, K.;
Maneva, G.;
Mankuzhiyil, N.;
Mannheim, K.;
Maraschi, L.;
Marcote, B.;
Mariotti, M.;
MartÓ-nez, M.;
Mazin, D.;
Menzel, U.;
Meucci, M.;
Miranda, J. M.;
Mirzoyan, R.;
Moralejo, A.;
Munar-Adrover, P.;
Nakajima, D.;
Niedzwiecki, A.;
Nilsson, K.;
Nowak, N.;
Orito, R.;
Overkemping, A.;
Paiano, S.;
Palatiello, M.;
Paneque, D.;
Paoletti, R.;
Paredes, J. M.;
Paredes-Fortuny, X.;
Partini, S.;
Persic, M.;
Prada, F.;
Moroni, P. G. Prada;
Prandini, E.;
Preziuso, S.;
Puljak, I.;
Reinthal, R.;
Rhode, W.;
RibÓÃ, M.;
Rico, J.;
Garcia, J. Rodriguez;
RÓÌgamer, S.;
Saggion, A.;
Saito, K.;
Salvati, M.;
Satalecka, K.;
Scalzotto, V.;
Scapin, V.;
Schultz, C.;
Schweizer, T.;
Shore, S. N.;
SillanpÓ?Ó?, A.;
Sitarek, J.;
Snidaric, I.;
Sobczynska, D.;
Spanier, F.;
Stamatescu, V.;
Stamerra, A.;
Steinbring, T.;
Storz, J.;
Sun, S.;
SuriÔ?, T.;
Takalo, L.;
Tavecchio, F.;
Temnikov, P.;
TerziÔ?, T.;
Tescaro, D.;
Teshima, M.;
Thaele, J.;
Tibolla, O.;
Torres, D. F.;
Toyama, T.;
Treves, A.;
Uellenbeck, M.;
Vogler, P.;
Wagner, R. M.;
Zandanel, F.;
Zanin, R.;
Balmaverde, B.;
Kataoka, J.;
Rekola, R.;
Takahashi, Y.;
.
Submitted: 2013-10-31, last modified: 2014-03-05
The radio galaxy NGC 1275, recently identified as a very high energy (VHE,
>100 GeV) gamma-ray emitter by MAGIC, is one of the few non-blazar AGN detected
in the VHE regime. In order to better understand the origin of the gamma-ray
emission and locate it within the galaxy, we studied contemporaneous
multi-frequency observations of NGC 1275 and modeled the overall spectral
energy distribution (SED). We analyzed unpublished MAGIC observations carried
out between Oct. 2009 and Feb. 2010, and the previously published ones taken
between Aug. 2010 and Feb. 2011. We studied the multi-band variability and
correlations by analyzing data of Fermi-LAT (0.1-100 GeV), as well as Chandra
(X-ray), KVA (optical) and MOJAVE (radio) data taken during the same period.
Using customized Monte Carlo simulations corresponding to early MAGIC stereo
data, we detect NGC 1275 also in the earlier campaign. The flux level and
energy spectra are similar to the results of the second campaign. The monthly
light curve >100 GeV shows a hint of variability at the 3.6 sigma level. In the
Fermi-LAT band, both flux and spectral shape variabilities are reported. The
optical light curve is variable and shows a clear correlation with the
gamma-ray flux >100 MeV. In radio, 3 compact components are resolved in the
innermost part of the jet. One of them shows a similar trend as the LAT and KVA
light curves. The 0.1-650 GeV spectra measured simultaneously with MAGIC and
Fermi-LAT can be well fitted either by a log-parabola or by a power-law with a
sub-exponential cutoff for both campaigns. A single-zone
synchrotron-self-Compton model, with an electron spectrum following a power-law
with an exponential cutoff, can explain the broadband SED and the multi-band
behavior of the source. However, this model suggests an untypical low
bulk-Lorentz factor or a velocity alignment closer to the line of sight than
the pc-scale radio jet.
[14]
oai:arXiv.org:1401.3344 [pdf] - 1202757
Ground-based astrometry with wide field imagers. V. Application to
near-infrared detectors: HAWK-I@VLT/ESO
Submitted: 2014-01-14
High-precision astrometry requires accurate point-spread function modeling
and accurate geometric-distortion corrections. This paper demonstrates that it
is possible to achieve both requirements with data collected at the high acuity
wide-field K-band imager (HAWK-I), a wide-field imager installed at the Nasmyth
focus of UT4/VLT ESO 8m telescope. Our final astrometric precision reaches ~3
mas per coordinate for a well-exposed star in a single image with a systematic
error less than 0.1 mas. We constructed calibrated astro-photometric catalogs
and atlases of seven fields: the Baade's Window, NGC 6656, NGC 6121, NGC 6822,
NGC 6388, NGC 104, and the James Webb Space Telescope calibration field in the
Large Magellanic Cloud. We make these catalogs and images electronically
available to the community. Furthermore, as a demonstration of the efficacy of
our approach, we combined archival material taken with the optical wide-field
imager at the MPI/ESO 2.2m with HAWK-I observations. We showed that we are able
to achieve an excellent separation between cluster members and field objects
for NGC 6656 and NGC 6121 with a time base-line of about 8 years. Using both
HST and HAWK-I data, we also study the radial distribution of the SGB
populations in NGC 6656 and conclude that the radial trend is flat within our
uncertainty. We also provide membership probabilities for most of the stars in
NGC 6656 and NGC 6121 catalogs and estimate membership for the published
variable stars in these two fields.
[15]
oai:arXiv.org:1312.5640 [pdf] - 791827
Improved Hubble Space Telescope Proper Motions for Tycho-G and Other
Stars in the Remnant of Tycho's Supernova 1572
Submitted: 2013-12-19
With archival and new Hubble Space Telescope observations we have refined the
space-velocity measurements of the stars in the central region of the remnant
of Tycho's supernova (SN) 1572, one of the historical Galactic Type Ia
supernova remnants (SNRs). We derived a proper motion for Tycho-G of
(mu_RA_cos_dec;mu_dec)=(-2.63;-3.98)+/-(0.06;0.04)[formal
errors]+/-(0.18;0.10)[expected errors] mas/yr. We also reconstruct the binary
orbit that Tycho-G should have followed if it were the surviving companion of
SN 1572. We redetermine the Ni abundance of this star and compare it with new
abundance data from stars of the Galactic disk, finding that [Ni/Fe] is about
1.7 sigma above the Galactic trend. From the high velocity (v_b = -50+/-14
km/s) of Tycho-G perpendicular to the Galactic plane, its metallicity, and its
Ni excess, we find the probability of its being a chance interloper to be P <
0.00037 at most. The projected rotational velocity of the star should be below
current observational limits. The projected position of Tycho-G is, within the
uncertainties, consistent with the centroid of the X-ray emission of Tycho's
SNR; moreover, its brightness is generally consistent with the post-explosion
evolution of the luminosity of a SN companion. Among the other 23 stars having
V<22 mag and located within 42 arcsec from the X-ray centroid, only 4 are at
distances compatible with that of the SNR, and none of them shows any
peculiarity. Therefore, if even Tycho-G is not the surviving companion of SN
1572, the absence of other viable candidates does favor the merging of two
white dwarfs as the producer of the SN.
[16]
oai:arXiv.org:1312.1281 [pdf] - 839321
Nuclei of Seyfert galaxies and QSOs - Central engine and conditions of
star formation. Workshop summary and open questions
Submitted: 2013-12-04
Observationally established correlations between black hole mass and host
galaxy structural/dynamical properties (like the M_BH - sigma relation) give
support to the idea of an intimate link between the growth of black holes (BHs)
and their host galaxies. Active galactic nuclei represent a poorly understood
phase (or phases) in the life of a galaxy, during which the BH growth is
directly observable. With the advent of wide-field surveys and high angular
resolution instruments, it is now possible to observe the source of energy in
Seyfert galaxies and QSOs, and conduct both statistical and detailed on-object
studies. Combining these two perspectives gives rise to new research questions
and methods. This Workshop, aimed at discussing these questions and gathering
the astronomical community working on AGN, their feeding and feedback
mechanisms, and their relations to the host galaxies. The purpose of this
summary paper is to condense in a few pages some of the ideas and discussion
points that were considered during the Workshop. We would also like to call the
attention to some open questions that are still matter of debate and drive the
research efforts in the field.
[17]
oai:arXiv.org:1312.1096 [pdf] - 1202031
The M4 Core Project with HST --- I. Overview and First-Epoch
Bedin, L. R.;
Anderson, J.;
Heggie, D. C.;
Piotto, G.;
Milone, A. P.;
Giersz, M.;
Nascimbeni, V.;
Bellini, A.;
Rich, R. M.;
Berg, M. van den;
Pooley, D.;
Brogaard, K.;
Ortolani, S.;
Malavolta, L.;
Ubeda, L.;
Marino, A. F.;
.
Submitted: 2013-12-04
We present an overview of the ongoing Hubble Space Telescope large program
GO-12911. The program is focused on the core of M4, the nearest Galactic
globular cluster, and the observations are designed to constrain the number of
binaries with massive companions (black holes, neutron stars, or white dwarfs)
by measuring the ``wobble'' of the luminous (main-sequence) companion around
the center of mass of the pair, with an astrometric precision of ~50
micro-arcseconds. The high spatial resolution and stable medium-band PSFs of
WFC3/UVIS will make these measurements possible. In this work we describe: (i)
the motivation behind this study, (ii) our observing strategy, (iii) the many
other investigations enabled by this unique data set, and which of those our
team is conducting, and (iv) a preliminary reduction of the first-epoch
data-set collected on October 10, 2012.
[18]
oai:arXiv.org:1311.0900 [pdf] - 1180478
Assessing the reliability of Friends-of-Friends groups on the future
Javalambre Physics of the Accelerating Universe Astrophysical Survey
Submitted: 2013-11-04
We have performed a detailed analysis of the ability of the
friends-of-friends algorithm in identifying real galaxy systems in deep surveys
such as the future Javalambre Physics of the Accelerating Universe
Astrophysical Survey. Our approach is two-fold, i.e., assessing the reliability
of the algorithm in both real and redshift space. In the latter, our intention
is also to determine the degree of accuracy that could be achieved when using
spectroscopic or photometric redshift determinations as a distance indicator.
We have built a light-cone mock catalogue using synthetic galaxies constructed
from the Millennium Run Simulation I plus a semi-analytical model of galaxy
formation. We have explored different ways to define the proper linking length
parameters of the algorithm in order to perform an identification of galaxy
groups as suitable as possible in each case. We find that, when identifying
systems in redshift space using spectroscopic information, the linking lengths
should take into account the variation of the luminosity function with redshift
as well as the linear redshift dependence of the radial fiducial velocity in
the line of sight direction. When testing purity and completeness of the group
samples, we find that the best resulting group sample reaches values of 40% and
70% of systems with high levels of purity and completeness, respectively, when
using spectroscopic information. When identifying systems using photometric
redshifts, we adopted a probabilistic approach to link galaxies in the line of
sight direction. Our result suggests that it is possible to identify a sample
of groups with less than 40% false identification at the same time as we
recover around 60% of the true groups. This modified version of the algorithm
can be applied to deep surveys provided that the linking lengths are selected
appropriately for the science to be done with the data.
[19]
oai:arXiv.org:1308.6577 [pdf] - 1178883
On the influence of physical galaxy properties on Lyman-alpha escape in
star-forming galaxies
Submitted: 2013-08-29
[abridged] Among the different observational techniques used to select
high-redshift galaxies, the hydrogen recombination line Lyman-alpha (Lya) is of
particular interest as it gives access to the measurement of cosmological
quantities such as the star formation rate of distant galaxy populations.
However, the interpretation of this line and the calibration of such
observables is still subject to serious uncertainties. Therefore, it important
to understand under what conditions the Lya line can be used as a reliable star
formation diagnostic tool. We use a sample of 24 Lya emitters at z ~ 0.3 with
an optical spectroscopic follow-up to calculate the Lya escape fraction and its
dependency upon different physical properties. We also examine the reliability
of Lya as a star formation rate indicator. We combine these observations with a
compilation of Lya emitters selected at z = 0 - 0.3 to assemble a larger
sample. The Lya escape fraction depends clearly on the dust extinction
following the relation fesc(Lya) = C(Lya) x 10^(-0.4 E(B-V) k(Lya)), but with a
shallower slope than previously reported, with k(Lya) ~ 6.67 and C(Lya) = 0.22.
However, the correlation does not follow the expected curve for a simple dust
attenuation. We explore the various mechanisms than lead to fesc(Lya) values
above the continuum extinction curve, i.e. to an enhancement of the Lya output.
We also observe that the strength of Lya and the escape fraction appear
unrelated to the galaxy metallicity. Regarding the reliability of Lya as a star
formation rate (SFR) indicator, we show that the deviation of SFR(Lya) from the
true SFR (as traced by the UV continuum) is a function of the observed SFR(UV),
which can be seen as the decrease of fesc(Lya) with increasing UV luminosity.
Moreover, we observe a redshift-dependence of this relationship revealing the
underlying evolution of fesc(Lya) with redshift.
[20]
oai:arXiv.org:1308.5653 [pdf] - 1178786
Cosmological Parameter Estimation from SN Ia data: a Model-Independent
Approach
Submitted: 2013-08-26
We perform a model independent reconstruction of the cosmic expansion rate
based on type Ia supernova data. Using the Union 2.1 data set, we show that the
Hubble parameter behaviour allowed by the data without making any hypothesis
about cosmological model or underlying gravity theory is consistent with a flat
LCDM universe having H_0 = 70.43 +- 0.33 and Omega_m=0.297 +- 0.020, weakly
dependent on the choice of initial scatter matrix. This is in closer agreement
with the recently released Planck results (H_0 = 67.3 +- 1.2, Omega_m = 0.314
+- 0.020) than other standard analyses based on type Ia supernova data. We
argue this might be an indication that, in order to tackle subtle deviations
from the standard cosmological model present in type Ia supernova data, it is
mandatory to go beyond parametrized approaches.
[21]
oai:arXiv.org:1305.3273 [pdf] - 708015
Are Narrow Line Seyfert 1s a special class of Active Galactic Nuclei?
Valencia-S., M.;
Zuther, J.;
Eckart, A.;
Smajic, S.;
Iserlohe, C.;
Garcia-Marin, M.;
Busch, G.;
Vitale, M.;
Bremer, M.;
Fischer, S.;
Horrobin, M.;
Moser, L.;
Rashed, Y. E.;
Straubmeier, C.;
.
Submitted: 2013-05-14, last modified: 2013-08-19
No. Due to their apparently extreme optical to X-ray properties, Narrow Line
Seyfert 1s (NLSy1s) have been considered a special class of active galactic
nuclei (AGN). Here, we summarize observational results from different groups to
conclude that none of the characteristics that are typically used to define the
NLSy1s as a distinct group - from the, nowadays called, Broad Line Seyfert 1s
(BLSy1s) - is unique, nor ubiquitous of these particular sources, but shared by
the whole Type 1 AGN. Historically, the NLSy1s have been distinguished from the
BLSy1s by the narrow width of the broad Hbeta emission line. The upper limit on
the full width at half maximum of this line is 2000 km/s for NLSy1s, while in
BLSy1s it can be of several thousands of km/s. However, this border has been
arbitrarily set and does not correspond to the change of any physical property.
All observed parameters in Type 1 AGN cover continues ranges of values, which
does not allow to infer the existence of two different kind of populations with
FWHM(Hbeta,broad) = 2000 km/s as dividing point. We argue that the usage of
this velocity limit to define samples of NLSy1s galaxies - as it is usually
done in comparative studies -, together with the well known observational
biases, naturally favors the selection of sources with low black hole masses
and high Eddington ratios that are hosted by blue spiral galaxies. Therefore
selection biases might be responsible for the reported differences between
NLSy1 and BLSy1 sources.
[22]
oai:arXiv.org:1307.1712 [pdf] - 815281
The Jubilee ISW Project I: simulated ISW and weak lensing maps and
initial power spectra results
Watson, W. A.;
Diego, J. M.;
GottlÓÆber, S.;
Iliev, I. T.;
Knebe, A.;
MartÓ-nez-GonzÓÅlez, E.;
Yepes, G.;
Barreiro, R. B.;
GonzÓÅlez-Nuevo, J.;
Hotchkiss, S.;
Marcos-Caballero, A.;
Nadathur, S.;
Vielva, P.;
.
Submitted: 2013-07-05, last modified: 2013-07-09
We present initial results from the Jubilee ISW project, which models the
expected \LambdaCDM Integrated Sachs-Wolfe (ISW) effect in the Jubilee
simulation. The simulation volume is (6 Gpc/h)^3, allowing power on very
large-scales to be incorporated into the calculation. Haloes are resolved down
to a mass of 1.5x10^12 M_sun/h, which allows us to derive a catalogue of mock
Luminous Red Galaxies (LRGs) for cross-correlation analysis with the ISW
signal. We find the ISW effect observed on a projected sky to grow stronger at
late times with the evolution of the ISW power spectrum matching expectations
from linear theory. Maps of the gravitational lensing effect, including the
convergence and deflection fields, are calculated using the same potential as
for the ISW. We calculate the redshift dependence of the ISW-LRG
cross-correlation signal for a full sky survey with no noise considerations.
For l < 30, the signal is strongest for lower redshift bins (z ~ 0.2 to 0.5),
whereas for l > 30 the signal is best observed with surveys covering z ~
0.6-1.0.
[23]
oai:arXiv.org:1306.0905 [pdf] - 1171798
Physical Properties, Star Formation, and Active Galactic Nucleus
Activity in Balmer Break Galaxies at 0 < z < 1
Submitted: 2013-06-04
We present a spectroscopic study with the derivation of the physical
properties of 37 Balmer break galaxies, which have the necessary lines to
locate them in star-forming-AGN diagnostic diagrams. These galaxies span a
redshift range from 0.045 to 0.93 and are somewhat less massive than similar
samples of previous works. The studied sample has multiwavelength photometric
data coverage from the ultraviolet to MIR Spitzer bands. We investigate the
connection between star formation and AGN activity via optical, mass-excitation
(MEx) and MIR diagnostic diagrams. Through optical diagrams, 31 (84%)
star-forming galaxies, 2 (5%) composite galaxies and 3 (8%) AGNs were
classified, whereas from the MEx diagram only one galaxy was classified as AGN.
A total of 19 galaxies have photometry available in all the IRAC/Spitzer bands.
Of these, 3 AGN candidates were not classified as AGN in the optical diagrams,
suggesting they are dusty/obscured AGNs, or that nuclear star formation has
diluted their contributions. Furthermore, the relationship between SFR surface
density (\Sigma_{SFR}) and stellar mass surface density per time unit
(\Sigma_{M_{\ast}/\tau}) as a function of redshift was investigated using the
[OII] \lambda3727, 3729, H\alpha \lambda6563 luminosities, which revealed that
both quantities are larger for higher redshift galaxies. We also studied the
SFR and SSFR versus stellar mass and color relations, with the more massive
galaxies having higher SFR values but lower SSFR values than less massive
galaxies. These results are consistent with previous ones showing that, at a
given mass, high-redshift galaxies have on average larger SFR and SSFR values
than low-redshift galaxies. Finally, bluer galaxies have larger SSFR values
than redder galaxies and for a given color the SSFR is larger for higher
redshift galaxies.
[24]
oai:arXiv.org:1203.6063 [pdf] - 664077
Is IRAS 01072+4954 a True-Seyfert 2? Hints from Near Infrared Integral
Field Spectroscopy
Submitted: 2012-03-27, last modified: 2013-05-14
In contrast to the predictions of the unified model, some X-ray unobscured
Seyfert 2 galaxies have been discovered in the last decade. One of them, the
starburst/Seyfert composite galaxy IRAS 01072+4954 (z=0.0236), has a typical
Type~1 X-ray emission, while its optical spectrum resembles an HII galaxy and
lacks the expected broad lines. We performed near-infrared integral-field
observations of this object with the aim to determine the nature of its nuclear
emission and to find indications for the existence or absence of a broad-line
region. Several reasons have been proposed to explain such peculiar emission.
We studied the validity of such hypotheses, including the possibility for it to
be True-Seyfert~2. We found little obscuration towards the nucleus A_V = 2.5
mag, and a nuclear star-formation rate Sigma_SFR < 11.6 Msun yr^{-1} kpc^{-2},
which is below the average in Seyferts. Unresolved hot-dust emission with T ~
1150 K seems to indicate the presence of a torus with its axis close to the
line of sight. We found that IRAS 01072+4954 hosts a low mass black hole with
an estimated mass of M_BH ~ 10^5 Msun and an upper limit of 2.5x10^6 Msun. Its
bolometric luminosity is L_bol ~ 2.5x10^{42} erg/s, which yields a high
accretion rate with an Eddington ratio ~ 0.2. If the relations found in more
massive systems also apply to this case, then IRAS 01072+4954 should show broad
emission lines with FWHM_{broad} ~(400-600) km/s. Indeed, some indications for
such narrow broad-line components are seen in our data, but the evidence is not
yet conclusive. This source thus seems not to be a True-Seyfert 2, but an
extreme case of a narrow line Seyfert 1, which, due to the faintness of the
active nucleus, does not have strong FeII emission in the optical.
[25]
oai:arXiv.org:1305.3277 [pdf] - 664171
Discovery of an Intermediate Mass Black Hole at the center of the
starburst/Seyfert composite galaxy IRAS 01072+4954
Valencia-S., M.;
Eckart, A.;
Zuther, J.;
Fischer, S.;
Smajic, S.;
Iserlohe, C.;
Garcia-Marin, M.;
Moser, L.;
Bremer, M.;
Vitale, M.;
.
Submitted: 2013-05-14
The starburst/Seyfert composite galaxy IRAS 01072+4954 (z=0.0236) is an
enigmatic source that combines a Seyfert~1-like X-ray emission with a starburst
optical spectrum that lacks broad line emission. We performed high angular
resolution observations of the central kiloparsec of this galaxy in the
near-infrared. Combining our data with 2MASS images of the whole galaxy, we
obtain and model the surface brightness profile. We find indications for the
presence of an elongated bar-like structure in both data sets. We also model
the line of sight velocity distribution of the stars in the bulge. The derived
photometrical and kinematical parameters of the bulge are used to evaluate the
black hole mass through scaling relations. We find that all reliable
estimations of the black hole mass are consistent with the presence of an
intermediate mass black hole with a mass of ~10^5 solar masses (or less).
[26]
oai:arXiv.org:1303.1213 [pdf] - 1165032
Optical counterparts of the nearest ultraluminous X-ray sources
Submitted: 2013-03-05
We present a photometric survey of the optical counterparts of ultraluminous
X-ray sources (ULXs) observed with the Hubble Space Telescope in nearby (< 5
Mpc) galaxies. Of the 33 ULXs with Hubble & Chandra data, 9 have no visible
counterpart, placing limits on their M_V of ~ -4 to -9, enabling us to rule out
O-type companions in 4 cases. The refined positions of two ULXs place them in
the nucleus of their host galaxy. They are removed from our sample. Of the 22
remaining ULXs, 13 have one possible optical counterpart, while multiple are
visible within the error regions of other ULXs. By calculating the number of
chance coincidences, we estimate that 13 +/- 5 are the true counterparts. We
attempt to constrain the nature of the companions by fitting the SED and M_V to
obtain candidate spectral types. We can rule out O-type companions in 20 cases,
while we find that one ULX (NGC 253 ULX2) excludes all OB-type companions.
Fitting with X-ray irradiated models provides constraints on the donor star
mass and radius. For 7 ULXs, we are able to impose inclination-dependent upper
and/or lower limits on the black holes mass, if the extinction to the assumed
companion star is not larger than the Galactic column. These are NGC 55 ULX1,
NGC 253 ULX1, NGC 253 ULX2, NGC 253 XMM6, Ho IX X-1, IC342 X-1 & NGC 5204 X-1.
This suggests that 10 ULXs do not have O companions, while none of the 18
fitted rule out B-type companions.
[27]
oai:arXiv.org:1301.3064 [pdf] - 1159023
Flare-like variability of the Mg II\lambda 2800\AA\ emission line in the
gamma-ray blazar 3C 454.3
LeÓÃn-Tavares, J.;
Chavushyan, V.;
PatiÓÁo-Ó?lvarez, V.;
Valtaoja, E.;
Arshakian, T. G.;
Popovic\altaffilmark, L. C.;
Tornikoski, M.;
Lobanov, A.;
CarramiÓÁana, A.;
Carrasco, L.;
LÓ?hteenmÓ?ki, A.;
.
Submitted: 2013-01-14
We report the detection of a statistically significant flare-like event in
the Mg II\lambda 2800\AA\ emission line of 3C 454.3 during the outburst of
autumn 2010. The highest levels of emission line flux recorded over the
monitoring period (2008 - 2011) coincide with a superluminal jet component
traversing through the radio core. This finding crucially links the
broad-emission line fluctuations to the non-thermal continuum emission produced
by relativistically moving material in the jet and hence to the presence of
broad-line region clouds surrounding the radio core. If the radio core were
located at several parsecs from the central black hole then our results would
suggest the presence of broad-line region material outside the inner parsec
where the canonical broad-line region is envisaged to be located. We briefly
discuss the implications of broad-emission line material ionized by non-thermal
continuum on the context of virial black hole mass estimates and gamma-ray
production mechanisms.
[28]
oai:arXiv.org:1204.1051 [pdf] - 1117776
The stellar metallicity distribution of disc galaxies and bulges in
cosmological simulations
Calura, F.;
Gibson, B. K.;
Michel-Dansac, L.;
Stinson, G. S.;
Cignoni, M.;
Dotter, A.;
Pilkington, K.;
House, E. L.;
Brook, C. B.;
Few, C. G.;
Bailin, J.;
Couchman, H. M. P.;
Wadsley, J.;
.
Submitted: 2012-04-04, last modified: 2012-09-06
By means of high-resolution cosmological hydrodynamical simulations of Milky
Way-like disc galaxies, we conduct an analysis of the associated stellar
metallicity distribution functions (MDFs). After undertaking a kinematic
decomposition of each simulation into spheroid and disc sub-components, we
compare the predicted MDFs to those observed in the solar neighbourhood and the
Galactic bulge. The effects of the star formation density threshold are visible
in the star formation histories, which show a modulation in their behaviour
driven by the threshold. The derived MDFs show median metallicities lower by
0.2-0.3 dex than the MDF observed locally in the disc and in the Galactic
bulge. Possible reasons for this apparent discrepancy include the use of low
stellar yields and/or centrally-concentrated star formation. The dispersions
are larger than the one of the observed MDF; this could be due to simulated
discs being kinematically hotter relative to the Milky Way. The fraction of low
metallicity stars is largely overestimated, visible from the more negatively
skewed MDF with respect to the observational sample. For our fiducial Milky Way
analog, we study the metallicity distribution of the stars born "in situ"
relative to those formed via accretion (from disrupted satellites), and
demonstrate that this low-metallicity tail to the MDF is populated primarily by
accreted stars. Enhanced supernova and stellar radiation energy feedback to the
surrounding interstellar media of these pre-disrupted satellites is suggested
as an important regulator of the MDF skewness.
[29]
oai:arXiv.org:1208.4581 [pdf] - 1150833
Nuclear X-ray properties of the peculiar radio-loud hidden AGN 4C+29.30
Submitted: 2012-08-22
We present results from a study of a nuclear emission of a nearby radio
galaxy, 4C+29.30, over a broad 0.5-200 keV X-ray band. This study used new
XMM-Newton (~17 ksec) and Chandra (~300 ksec) data, and archival Swift/BAT data
from the 58-month catalog. The hard (>2 keV) X-ray spectrum of 4C+29.30 can be
decomposed into an intrinsic hard power-law (Gamma ~ 1.56) modified by a cold
absorber with an intrinsic column density N_{H,z} ~ 5x10^{23} cm^{-2}, and its
reflection (|Omega/2pi| ~ 0.3) from a neutral matter including a narrow iron
Kalpha emission line at the rest frame energy ~6.4 keV. The reflected component
is less absorbed than the intrinsic one with an upper limit on the absorbing
column of N^{refl}_{H,z} < 2.5x10^{22} cm^{-2}. The X-ray spectrum varied
between the XMM-Newton and Chandra observations. We show that a scenario
invoking variations of the normalization of the power-law is favored over a
model with variable intrinsic column density. X-rays in the 0.5-2 keV band are
dominated by diffuse emission modeled with a thermal bremsstrahlung component
with temperature ~0.7 keV, and contain only a marginal contribution from the
scattered power-law component. We hypothesize that 4C+29.30 belongs to a class
of `hidden' AGN containing a geometrically thick torus. However, unlike the
majority of them, 4C+29.30 is radio-loud. Correlations between the scattering
fraction and Eddington luminosity ratio, and the one between black hole mass
and stellar velocity dispersion, imply that 4C+29.30 hosts a black hole with
~10^8 M_{Sun} mass.
[30]
oai:arXiv.org:1203.6428 [pdf] - 951710
Granular-Scale Elementary Flux Emergence Episodes in a Solar Active
Region
Submitted: 2012-03-29
We analyze data from Hinode spacecraft taken over two 54-minute periods
during the emergence of AR 11024. We focus on small-scale portions within the
observed solar active region and discover the appearance of very distinctive
small-scale and short-lived dark features in Ca II H chromospheric filtergrams
and Stokes I images. The features appear in regions with close-to-zero
longitudinal magnetic field, and are observed to increase in length before they
eventually disappear. Energy release in the low chromospheric line is detected
while the dark features are fading. In time series of magnetograms a diverging
bipolar configuration is observed accompanying the appearance of the dark
features and the brightenings. The observed phenomena are explained as
evidencing elementary flux emergence in the solar atmosphere, i.e small-scale
arch filament systems rising up from the photosphere to the lower chromosphere
with a length scale of a few solar granules. Brightenings are explained as
being the signatures of chromospheric heating triggered by reconnection of the
rising loops (once they reached chromospheric heights) with pre-existing
magnetic fields as well as to reconnection/cancellation events in U-loop
segments of emerging serpentine fields. We study the temporal evolution and
dynamics of the events and compare them with the emergence of magnetic loops
detected in quiet sun regions and serpentine flux emergence signatures in
active regions. Incorporating the novel features of granular-scale flux
emergence presented in this study we advance the scenario for serpentine flux
emergence.
[31]
oai:arXiv.org:1203.1334 [pdf] - 1117110
Deep Chandra X-ray Imaging of a Nearby Radio Galaxy 4C+29.30:
X-ray/Radio Connection
Siemiginowska, Aneta;
Stawarz, Õ?ukasz;
Cheung, Chi C.;
Aldcroft, Thomas L.;
Bechtold, Jill;
Burke, D. J.;
Evans, Daniel;
Holt, Joanna;
Jamrozy, Marek;
Migliori, Giulia;
.
Submitted: 2012-03-06
We report results from our deep Chandra X-ray observations of a nearby radio
galaxy, 4C+29.30 (z=0.0647). The Chandra image resolves structures on
sub-arcsec to arcsec scales, revealing complex X-ray morphology and detecting
the main radio features: the nucleus, a jet, hotspots, and lobes. The nucleus
is absorbed (N(H)=3.95 (+0.27/-0.33)x10^23 atoms/cm^2) with an unabsorbed
luminosity of L(2-10 keV) ~ (5.08 +/-0.52) 10^43 erg/s characteristic of Type 2
AGN. Regions of soft (<2 keV) X-ray emission that trace the hot interstellar
medium (ISM) are correlated with radio structures along the main radio axis
indicating a strong relation between the two. The X-ray emission beyond the
radio source correlates with the morphology of optical line-emitting regions.
We measured the ISM temperature in several regions across the galaxy to be kT ~
0.5 with slightly higher temperatures (of a few keV) in the center and in the
vicinity of the radio hotspots. Assuming these regions were heated by weak
shocks driven by the expanding radio source, we estimated the corresponding
Mach number of 1.6 in the southern regions. The thermal pressure of the X-ray
emitting gas in the outermost regions suggest the hot ISM is slightly
under-pressured with respect to the cold optical-line emitting gas and
radio-emitting plasma, which both seem to be in a rough pressure equilibrium.
We conclude that 4C+29.30 displays a complex view of interactions between the
jet-driven radio outflow and host galaxy environment, signaling feedback
processes closely associated with the central active nucleus.
[32]
oai:arXiv.org:1202.2855 [pdf] - 1116602
On the evolutionary and pulsation mass of Classical Cepheids: III. the
case of the eclipsing binary Cepheid CEP0227 in the Large Magellanic Cloud
Submitted: 2012-02-13
We present a new Bayesian approach to constrain the intrinsic parameters
(stellar mass, age) of the eclipsing binary system CEP0227 in the LMC. We
computed evolutionary models covering a broad range in chemical compositions
and in stellar mass. Independent sets of models were constructed either by
neglecting or by including a moderate convective core overshooting (beta=0.2)
during central H-burning phases. Models were also constructed either by
neglecting or by assuming a canonical (eta=0.4,0.8) or an enhanced (eta=4) mass
loss rate. The solutions were computed in three different planes:
luminosity-temperature, mass-radius and gravity-temperature. By using the Bayes
Factor, we found that the most probable solutions were obtained in the
gravity-temperature plane with a Gaussian mass prior distribution. The
evolutionary models constructed by assuming a moderate convective core
overshooting (beta=0.2) and a canonical mass loss rate (eta=0.4) give stellar
masses for the primary Cepheid M=4.14^{+0.04}_{-0.05} M_sun and for the
secondary M=4.15^{+0.04}_{-0.05} M_sun that agree at the 1% level with
dynamical measurements. Moreover, we found ages for the two components and for
the combined system t=151^{+4}_{-3} Myr that agree at the 5% level. The
solutions based on evolutionary models that neglect the mass loss attain
similar parameters, while those ones based on models that either account for an
enhanced mass loss or neglect convective core overshooting have lower Bayes
Factors and larger confidence intervals. The dependence on the mass loss rate
might be the consequence of the crude approximation we use to mimic this
phenomenon. By using the isochrone of the most probable solution and a Gaussian
prior on the LMC distance, we found a distance modulus 18.53^{+0.02}_{-0.02}
mag and a reddening value E(B-V)= 0.142^{+0.005}_{-0.010} mag that agree well
with literature estimates.
[33]
oai:arXiv.org:1110.0480 [pdf] - 1084595
A study of the color diversity around maximum light in Type Ia
supernovae
Submitted: 2011-10-03
From a sample of 12 well-observed Type Ia supernovae, we find clear evidence
of correlations between early phase (U-B), (V-R), and (V-I) colors and the
velocity shifts of the [Fe II] \lambda 7155 and [Ni II] \lambda 7378 nebular
lines measured from late-phase spectra. As these lines are thought to trace the
ashes of the initial deflagration process, our findings provide additional
support to the new paradigm of off-center explosions in Type Ia supernovae, and
we interpret these correlations as viewing angle effects in the observed
colors. We also show that the nebular velocity shifts are related to the
strength and width of the Ca II H&K and IR-triplet lines near-maximum light.
The evidence presented here implies that the viewing angle must be taken into
account when deriving extinction values and distances in future cosmological
studies based on Type Ia supernovae.
[34]
oai:arXiv.org:1109.6896 [pdf] - 967098
Rotating Radio Transients
Submitted: 2011-09-30
Over the past several years, it has become apparent that some radio pulsars
demonstrate significant variability in their single pulse amplitude
distributions. The Rotating Radio Transients (RRATs), pulsars discovered
through their single, isolated pulses, are one of the more extreme
manifestations of this variability. Nearly 70 of these objects have been found
over the past several years in archival and new pulsar surveys. In this review,
we describe these searches and their resulting discoveries. We then discuss
radio timing algorithms and the spin-down properties of the 19 RRATs with
phase-connected solutions. The spin-down parameters fall within the same range
as other pulsars, with a tendency towards longer periods and higher magnetic
fields. Next we describe follow-up observations at radio wavelengths. These
show that there are periodic fluctuations in the pulse detection rates of some
RRATs and that RRATs in general have similar spectra to other pulsars. X-ray
detection has only been made for one RRAT, J1819-1458; observations have
revealed absorption features and a bright X-ray nebula. Finally, we look to
future telescopes and the progress that will be made with these in
characterising and understanding the Galactic RRAT population.
[35]
oai:arXiv.org:1106.1205 [pdf] - 1077110
Discovery Of Cold, Pristine Gas Possibly Accreting Onto An Overdensity
Of Star-Forming Galaxies At Redshift z ~ 1.6
Giavalisco, Mauro;
Vanzella, Eros;
Salimbeni, Sara;
Tripp, Todd M.;
Dickinson, Mark;
Cassata, Paolo;
Renzini, Alvio;
Guo, Yicheng;
Ferguson, Henry C.;
Nonino, Mario;
Cimatti, Andrea;
Kurk, Jaron;
Mignoli, Marco;
Tang, Yuping;
.
Submitted: 2011-06-06, last modified: 2011-08-09
We report the discovery of large amounts of cold (T ~ 10^4 K), chemically
young gas in an overdensity of galaxies at redshift z ~ 1.6 in the Great
Observatories Origins Deep Survey southern field (GOODS-S). The gas is
identified thanks to the ultra-strong Mg II absorption features it imprints in
the rest-frame UV spectra of galaxies in the background of the overdensity.
There is no evidence that the optically-thick gas is part of any massive galaxy
(i.e. M_star > 4x10^9 M_sun), but rather is associated with the overdensity;
less massive and fainter galaxies (25.5 < z_850 < 27.5 mag) have too large an
impact parameter to be causing ultra-strong absorption systems, based on our
knowledge of such systems. The lack of corresponding Fe II absorption features,
not detected even in co-added spectra, suggests that the gas is chemically more
pristine than the ISM and outflows of star-forming galaxies at similar
redshift, including those in the overdensity itself, and comparable to the most
metal-poor stars in the Milky Way halo. A crude estimate of the projected
covering factor of the high-column density gas (N_H >~ 10^20 cm-2) based on the
observed fraction of galaxies with ultra-strong absorbers is C_F ~ 0.04. A
broad, continuum absorption profile extending to the red of the interstellar Mg
II absorption line by <~ 2000 km/s is possibly detected in two independent
co-added spectra of galaxies of the overdensity, consistent with a large-scale
infall motion of the gas onto the overdensity and its galaxies. Overall, these
findings provides the first tentative evidence of accretion of cold, chemically
young gas onto galaxies at high redshift, possibly feeding their star formation
activity. The fact that the galaxies are members of a large structure, as
opposed to field galaxies, might play a significant role in our ability to
detect the accreting gas.
[36]
oai:arXiv.org:1104.4194 [pdf] - 654211
A galaxy as the source of a Civ absorption system close to the epoch of
reionization
Submitted: 2011-04-21, last modified: 2011-08-04
We find a bright (L_{UV}=2.5 L*_{z=6}) Lyman alpha emitter at redshift
z=5.719 at a projected distance of 79 physical kpc from a strong triply ionized
carbon (Civ) absorption system at redshift z=5.7238 previously reported in the
spectrum of the z_{em} = 6.309 QSO SDSS J1030+0524. This is the highest
redshift galaxy-absorber pair detected to-date, supporting the idea that
galaxy-wide outflows were already in place at the end of the epoch of
reionization. The proximity of this object makes it the most likely source of
metals, consistent with models of outflows at lower redshift where significant
observational evidence relates metal absorption systems with galaxies hosting
outflows.
In a typical outflow scenario, a wind of 200 km/s, active since the universe
was only 0.6 Gyr old (z ~8.4), could eject metals out to 79 kpc at z=5.719.
Although the origin of metals in the intergalactic medium (IGM) is still under
debate, our results are consistent with predictions from cosmological
simulations which reproduce the evolution of the cosmic density of Civ, from z
~ 6 to the present day based on outflow-driven enrichment of the IGM.
We also report two more Lyman alpha emitters in this field, at z=5.973\pm
0.002 and z=5.676\pm 0.002 respectively, the former confirming the original
identification by Stiavelli et al. Our results suggest that the colour cut
typically used to identify i-dropouts (i_{775}-z_{850}>1.3) misses a
non-negligible fraction of blue galaxies with faint UV continuum at z \geq 5.7.
[37]
oai:arXiv.org:1107.3151 [pdf] - 1078010
Segue 3: An Old, Extremely Low luminosity Star Cluster in the Milky
Way's Halo
Submitted: 2011-07-15
We investigate the kinematic and photometric properties of the Segue 3 Milky
Way companion using Keck/DEIMOS spectroscopy and Magellan/IMACS g and r-band
imaging. Using maximum likelihood methods to analyze the photometry, we study
the structure and stellar population of Segue 3. We find the half-light radius
of Segue 3 is 26" +/- 5" (2.1 +/- 0.4 pc, for a distance of 17 kpc) and the
absolute magnitude is a mere M_V = 0.0 +/- 0.8 mag, making Segue 3 the least
luminous old stellar system known. We find Segue 3 to be consistent with a
single stellar population, with an age of 12.0 +1.5/-0.4 Gyr and an [Fe/H] of
-1.7 +0.07/-0.27. Line-of-sight velocities from the spectra are combined with
the photometry to determine a sample of 32 stars which are likely associated
with Segue 3. The member stars within three half-light radii have a velocity
dispersion of 1.2 +/- 2.6 km/s. Photometry of the members indicates the stellar
population has a spread in [Fe/H] of <0.3 dex. These facts, together with the
small physical size of Segue 3, imply the object is likely an old, faint
stellar cluster which contains no significant dark matter. We find tentative
evidence for stellar mass loss in Segue 3 through the eleven candidate member
stars outside of three half-light radii, as expected from dynamical arguments.
Interpretation of the data outside of three half-light radii, is complicated by
the object's spatial coincidence with a previously known halo substructure,
which may enhance contamination of our member sample.
[38]
oai:arXiv.org:1106.2118 [pdf] - 1077206
A lower mass for the exoplanet WASP-21b
Submitted: 2011-06-10
We present high precision transit observations of the exoplanet WASP-21b,
obtained with the RISE instrument mounted on 2.0m Liverpool Telescope. A
transit model is fitted, coupled with an MCMC routine to derive accurate system
parameters. The two new high precision transits allow to estimate the stellar
density directly from the light curve. Our analysis suggests that WASP-21 is
evolving off the main sequence which led to a previous overestimation of the
stellar density. Using isochrone interpolation, we find a stellar mass of 0.86
\pm 0.04 Msun which is significantly lower than previously reported (1.01 \pm
0.03 Msun). Consequently, we find a lower planetary mass of $0.27 \pm 0.01
Mjup$. A lower inclination (87.4 \pm 0.3 degrees) is also found for the system
than previously reported, resulting in a slightly larger stellar (R_* =1.10 \pm
0.03 Rsun) and planetary radius (R_p = 1.14 \pm 0.04 Rjup). The planet radius
suggests a hydrogen/helium composition with no core which strengthens the
correlation between planetary density and host star metallicity. A new
ephemeris is determined for the system, i.e., t0 =2455084.51974 \pm 0.00020
(HJD) and P=4.3225060 \pm 0.0000031 days. We found no transit timing variations
in WASP-21b.
[39]
oai:arXiv.org:1104.2727 [pdf] - 1053364
RRATs: New Discoveries, Timing Solutions & Musings
Submitted: 2011-04-14
We describe observations of Rotating RAdio Transients (RRATs) that were
discovered in a re-analysis of the Parkes Multi-beam Pulsar Survey (PMPS). The
sources have now been monitored for sufficiently long to obtain seven new
coherent timing solutions, to make a total of 14 now known. Furthermore we
announce the discovery of 7 new transient sources, one of which may be
extragalactic in origin (with $z\sim0.1$) and would then be a second example of
the so-called `Lorimer burst'. The timing solutions allow us to infer neutron
star characteristics such as energy-loss rate, magnetic field strength and
evolutionary timescales, as well as facilitating multi-wavelength followup by
providing accurate astrometry. All of this enables us to consider the question
of whether or not RRATs are in any way special, i.e. a distinct and separate
population of neutron stars, as has been previously suggested. We see no reason
to consider 'RRAT' as anything other than a detection label, the subject of a
selection effect in the parameter space searched. However, single-pulse
searches can be utilised to great effect to identify pulsars difficult, or
impossible, to find by other means, in particular those with long-periods (half
of the PMPS RRATs have periods greater than 4 seconds), high-magnetic field
strengths ($B\gtrsim 10^{13}$ G) and pulsars approaching the 'death valley'.
The detailed nulling properties of such pulsars are unknown but the mounting
evidence suggests a broad range of behaviour in the pulsar population. The
group of RRATs fit in to the picture where pulsar magnetospheres switch between
stable configurations.
[40]
oai:arXiv.org:1104.0879 [pdf] - 1053175
Testing the comet nature of main belt comets. The spectra of
133P/Elst-Pizarro and 176P/LINEAR
Submitted: 2011-04-05
We present the visible spectrum of MBCs 133P/Elst-Pizarro and 176P/LINEAR, as
well as three Themis family asteroids: (62) Erato, (379), Huenna and (383)
Janina, obtained in 2007 using three telescopes at "El Roque de los Muchachos"'
Observatory, in La Palma, Spain, and the 8m Kueyen (UT2) VLT telescope at Cerro
Paranal, Chile.
The spectra of 133P and 176P resemble best those of B-type asteroid and are
very similar to those of Themis family members and are significantly different
from the spectrum of comet 162P/Siding-Spring and most of the observed cometary
nuclei. CN gas emission is not detected in the spectrum of 133P. We determine
an upper limit for the CN production rate Q(CN) = $= 2.8 \times 10^{21}$ mol/s,
three orders of magnitude lower than the Q(CN) of Jupiter family comets
observed at similar heliocentric distances.
The spectra of 133P/Elst-Pizarro and 176P/LINEAR confirm that they are likely
members of the Themis family of asteroids, fragments that probably retained
volatiles, and unlikely have a cometary origin in the trans-neptunian belt or
the Oort cloud.
[41]
oai:arXiv.org:1012.5831 [pdf] - 955806
Fossil Groups in the Millennium Simulation: Their environment and its
evolution
Submitted: 2010-12-28, last modified: 2011-02-09
Fossil systems are defined to be X-ray bright galaxy groups with a
2-magnitude difference between their two brightest galaxies within half the
projected virial radius,and represent an interesting extreme of the population
of galaxy agglomerations.However,the physical conditions and processes leading
to their formation are still poorly constrained.We compare the outskirts of
fossil systems with that of normal groups to understand whether environmental
conditions play a significant role in their formation.We study galaxy groups in
both,numerical simulations and observations.We use a variety of statistical
tools including the spatial cross-correlation function and the local density
parameter \Delta_5 to probe differences in the density and structure of the
environments of normal and fossil systems in the Millennium simulation.We find
that the number density of galaxies surrounding fossil systems evolves from
greater than that observed around normal systems at z=0.69, to lower than the
normal systems by z=0.Both fossil and normal systems exhibit an increment in
their otherwise radially declining local density measure (\Delta_5) at
distances of order 2.5r_{vir} from the system centre.We show that this
increment is more noticeable for fossil systems than normal systems and
demonstrate that this difference is linked to the earlier formation epoch of
fossil groups.Despite the importance of the assembly time, we show that the
environment is different for fossil and non-fossil systems with similar masses
and formation times along their evolution.We also confirm that the physical
characteristics identified in the Millennium simulation can also be detected in
SDSS observations.Our results confirm the commonly held belief that fossil
systems assembled earlier than normal systems but also show that the
surroundings of fossil groups could be responsible for the formation of their
large magnitude gap.
[42]
oai:arXiv.org:1012.0302 [pdf] - 1042314
Three years Swift-BAT Survey of AGN: reconciling theory and
observations?
Submitted: 2010-12-01
It is well accepted that unabsorbed as well as absorbed AGN are needed to
explain the nature and the shape of the Cosmic X-ray background, even if the
fraction of highly absorbed objects (dubbed Compton-thick sources)
substantially still escapes detection. We derive and analyze the absorption
distribution using a complete sample of AGN detected by Swift-BAT in the first
three years of the survey. The fraction of Compton-thick AGN represents only
4.6% of the total AGN population detected by Swift-BAT. However, we show that
once corrected for the bias against the detection of very absorbed sources the
real intrinsic fraction of Compton-thick AGN is 20$^{+9}_{-6}$%. We proved for
the first time (also in the BAT band) that the anti-correlation of the fraction
of absorbed AGN and luminosity it tightly connected to the different behavior
of the luminosity functions (XLFs) of absorbed and unabsorbed AGN. This points
towards a difference between the two subsamples of objects with absorbed AGN
being, on average, intrinsically less luminous than unobscured ones. Moreover
the XLFs show that the fraction of obscured AGN might also decrease at very low
luminosity. This can be successfully interpreted in the framework of a disk
cloud outflow scenario as the disappearance of the obscuring region below a
critical luminosity. Our results are discussed in the framework of population
synthesis models and the origin of the Cosmic X-ray Background.
[43]
oai:arXiv.org:1011.5915 [pdf] - 1042218
Multi-wavelength diagnostics of accretion in an X-ray selected sample of
CTTSs
Submitted: 2010-11-26
High resolution X-ray spectroscopy has revealed soft X-rays from high density
plasma in Classical T-Tauri stars (CTTSs), probably arising from the accretion
shock region. However, the mass accretion rates derived from the X-ray
observations are consistently lower than those derived from UV/optical/NIR
studies. We aim to test the hypothesis that the high density soft X-ray
emission is from accretion by analysing optical accretion tracers from an X-ray
selected sample of CTTSs in a homogeneous manner. We analyse optical spectra of
a sample of CTTSs and calculate the accretion rates based on measuring optical
emission lines. These are then compared to the accretion rates derived from the
X-ray spectroscopy. We find that, for each CTTS in our sample, the different
optical tracers predict mass accretion rates that agree within the errors,
albeit with a spread of ~1 order of magnitude. Typically, mass accretion rates
derived from Halpha and HeI 5876 Ang are larger than those derived from Hbeta,
Hgamma and OI. When comparisons of the optical mass accretion rates are made to
the X-ray derived mass accretion rates, we find that: a) the latter are always
lower (but by varying amounts); b) the latter range within a factor of ~2
around 2x10^{-10} M_odot yr^{-1}, despite the fact that the former span a range
of ~3 orders of magnitude. We suggest that the systematic underestimation of
the X-ray derived mass accretion rates could depend on the density distribution
inside the accretion streams, where the densest part of the stream is not
visible in the X-ray band because of the absorption by the stellar atmosphere.
We also suggest that a non-negligible optical depth of X-ray emission lines
produced by post-shock accreting plasma may explain the almost constant mass
accretion rates derived in X-rays if the effect is larger in stars with larger
optical mass accretion rates.
[44]
oai:arXiv.org:1004.3545 [pdf] - 1026429
The evolution of Lyman-break galaxies in CDM
Submitted: 2010-04-20, last modified: 2010-11-16
We make a detailed investigation of the properties of Lyman-break galaxies
(LBGs) in the LambdaCDM model. We present predictions for two published
variants of the GALFORM semi-analytical model: the Baugh et al. (2005) model,
which has star formation at high redshifts dominated by merger-driven
starbursts with a top-heavy IMF, and the Bower et al. (2006) model, which has
AGN feedback and a standard Solar neighbourhood IMF throughout. We show
predictions for the evolution of the rest-frame far-UV luminosity function in
the redshift range z=3-20, and compare with the observed luminosity functions
of LBGs at z=3-10. We find that the Baugh et al. model is in excellent
agreement with these observations, while the Bower et al. model predicts too
many high-luminosity LBGs. Dust extinction, which is predicted
self-consistently based on galaxy gas contents, metallicities and sizes, is
found to have a large effect on LBG luminosities. We compare predictions for
the size evolution of LBGs at different luminosities with observational data
for 2<z<7, and find the Baugh et al. model to be in good agreement. We present
predictions for stellar, halo and gas masses, star formation rates, circular
velocities, bulge-to-disk ratios, gas and stellar metallicities and clustering
bias, as functions of far-UV luminosity and redshift. We find broad consistency
with current observational constraints. We then present predictions for the
abundance and angular sizes of LBGs out to very high redshift (z<20), finding
that planned deep surveys with JWST should detect objects out to z<15. The
typical UV luminosities of galaxies are predicted to be very low at high
redshifts, which has implications for detecting the galaxies responsible for
reionizing the IGM; for example, at z=10, 50% of the ionizing photons are
expected to be produced by galaxies fainter than M_AB(1500A)-5logh ~ -15.
[45]
oai:arXiv.org:1004.0317 [pdf] - 1026084
The discovery of a very cool, very nearby brown dwarf in the Galactic
plane
Lucas, Philip W.;
Tinney, C. G.;
Burningham, Ben;
Leggett, S. K.;
Pinfield, David J.;
Smart, Richard;
Jones, Hugh R. A.;
Marocco, Federico;
Barber, Robert J.;
Yurchenko, Sergei N.;
Tennyson, Jonathan;
Ishii, Miki;
Tamura, Motohide;
Day-Jones, Avril C.;
Adamson, Andrew;
Allard, France;
Homeier, Derek;
.
Submitted: 2010-04-02, last modified: 2010-08-12
We report the discovery of a very cool, isolated brown dwarf, UGPS 0722-05,
with the UKIDSS Galactic Plane Survey. The near-infrared spectrum displays
deeper H2O and CH4 troughs than the coolest known T dwarfs and an unidentified
absorption feature at 1.275 um. We provisionally classify the object as a T10
dwarf but note that it may in future come to be regarded as the first example
of a new spectral type. The distance is measured by trigonometric parallax as
d=4.1{-0.5}{+0.6} pc, making it the closest known isolated brown dwarf. With
the aid of Spitzer/IRAC we measure H-[4.5] = 4.71. It is the coolest brown
dwarf presently known -- the only known T dwarf that is redder in H-[4.5] is
the peculiar T7.5 dwarf SDSS J1416+13B, which is thought to be warmer and more
luminous than UGPS 0722-05. Our measurement of the luminosity, aided by
Gemini/T-ReCS N band photometry, is L = 9.2 +/- 3.1x10^{-7} Lsun. Using a
comparison with well studied T8.5 and T9 dwarfs we deduce Teff=520 +/- 40 K.
This is supported by predictions of the Saumon & Marley models. With apparent
magnitude J=16.52, UGPS 0722-05 is the brightest T dwarf discovered by UKIDSS
so far. It offers opportunities for future study via high resolution
near-infrared spectroscopy and spectroscopy in the thermal infrared.
[46]
oai:arXiv.org:1004.0711 [pdf] - 1026128
The Parameter Space of Galaxy Formation
Submitted: 2010-04-05, last modified: 2010-05-29
Semi-analytic models are a powerful tool for studying the formation of
galaxies. However, these models inevitably involve a significant number of
poorly constrained parameters that must be adjusted to provide an acceptable
match to the observed universe. In this paper, we set out to quantify the
degree to which observational data-sets can constrain the model parameters. By
revealing degeneracies in the parameter space we can hope to better understand
the key physical processes probed by the data. We use novel mathematical
techniques to explore the parameter space of the GALFORM semi-analytic model.
We base our investigation on the Bower et al. 2006 version of GALFORM, adopting
the same methodology of selecting model parameters based on an acceptable match
to the local bJ and K luminosity functions. The model contains 16 parameters
that are poorly constrained, and we investigate this parameter space using the
Model Emulator technique, constructing a Bayesian approximation to the GALFORM
model that can be rapidly evaluated at any point in parameter space. By
combining successive waves of emulation, we show that only 0.26% of the initial
volume is of interest for further exploration. However, within this region we
show that the Bower et al. 2006 model is only one choice from an extended
sub-space of model parameters that can provide equally acceptable fits. We
explore the geometry of this region and begin to explore the physical
connections between parameters that are exposed by this analysis. We also
consider the impact of adding additional observational data to further
constrain the parameter space.
[47]
oai:arXiv.org:1003.0013 [pdf] - 1025426
Lithium and proton-capture elements in Globular Cluster dwarfs: the case
of 47 Tuc
Submitted: 2010-02-26, last modified: 2010-05-27
Previous surveys in a few metal-poor globular clusters (GCs) showed that the
determination of abundances for Li and proton-capture elements offers a key
tool to address the intracluster pollution scenario. In this Letter, we present
Na, O, and Li abundances in a large sample of dwarf stars in the metal-rich GC
47 Tucanae. We found a clear Na-O anticorrelation, in good agreement with what
obtained for giant members by Carretta et al. While lithium and oxygen
abundances appear to be positively correlated with each other, there is a large
scatter, well exceeding observational errors, and no anticorrelation with
sodium. These findings suggest that Li depletion, due to mechanisms internal to
the stars (which are cooler and more metal-rich than those on the Spite
plateau), combines with the usual pollution scenario responsible for the Na-O
anticorrelation.
[48]
oai:arXiv.org:1002.4421 [pdf] - 1025347
A Catalog of MIPSGAL Disk and Ring Sources
Submitted: 2010-02-23
We present a catalog of 416 extended, resolved, disk- and ring-like objects
as detected in the MIPSGAL 24 micron survey of the Galactic plane. This catalog
is the result of a search in the MIPSGAL image data for generally circularly
symmetric, extended "bubbles" without prior knowledge or expectation of their
physical nature. Most of the objects have no extended counterpart at 8 or 70
micron, with less than 20% detections at each wavelength. For the 54 objects
with central point sources, the sources are nearly always seen in all IRAC
bands. About 70 objects (16%) have been previously identified, with another 35
listed as IRAS sources. Among the identified objects, those with central
sources are mostly listed as emission-line stars, but with other source types
including supernova remnants, luminous blue variables, and planetary nebulae.
The 57 identified objects (of 362) without central sources are nearly all PNe
(~90%).which suggests that a large fraction of the 300+ unidentified objects in
this category are also PNe. These identifications suggest that this is
primarily a catalog of evolved stars. Also included in the catalog are two
filamentary objects that are almost certainly SNRs, and ten unusual compact
extended objects discovered in the search. Two of these show remarkable spiral
structure at both 8 and 24 micron. These are likely background galaxies
previously hidden by the intervening Galactic plane.
[49]
oai:arXiv.org:1001.0593 [pdf] - 1018991
Recent GRBs observed with the 1.23m CAHA telescope and the status of its
upgrade
Gorosabel, Javier;
Kubanek, Petr;
Jelinek, Martin;
Castro-Tirado, Alberto J.;
Postigo, Antonio de Ugarte;
Carrion, Sebastian Castillo;
Guziy, Sergey;
Cunniffe, Ronan;
Fernandez, Matilde;
Huelamo, Nuria;
Terron, Victor;
Morales, Nicolas;
Ortiz, Jose Luis;
Mottola, Stefano;
Carsenty, Uri;
.
Submitted: 2010-01-04
We report on optical observations of Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) followed up by
our collaboration with the 1.23m telescope located at the Calar Alto
observatory. The 1.23m telescope is an old facility, currently undergoing
upgrades to enable fully autonomous response to GRB alerts. We discuss the
current status of the control system upgrade of the 1.23m telescope. The
upgrade is being done by the ARAE our group, based on members of IAA (Instituto
de Astrofiisica de Andalucia). Currently the ARAE group is responsible to
develop the BOOTES network of robotic telescopes based on the Remote Telescope
System, 2nd Version (RTS2), which controls the available instruments and
interacts with the EPICS database of Calar Alto. Currently the telescope can
run fully autonomously or under observer supervision using RTS2. The fast
reaction response mode for GRB reaction (typically with response times below 3
minutes from the GRB onset) still needs some development and testing. The
telescope is usually operated in legacy interactive mode, with periods of
supervised autonomous runs under RTS2. We show the preliminary results of
several GRBs followed up with observer intervention during the testing phase of
the 1.23m control software upgrade.
[50]
oai:arXiv.org:0912.0234 [pdf] - 1018579
3D MHD Simulations of accreting neutron stars: evidence of QPO emission
from the surface
Submitted: 2009-12-01
3D Magnetohydrodynamic simulations show that when matter accretes onto
neutron stars, in particular if the misalignment angle is small, it does not
constantly fall at a fixed spot. Instead, the location at which matter reaches
the star moves. These moving hot spots can be produced both during stable
accretion, where matter falls near the magnetic poles of the star, and unstable
accretion, characterized by the presence of several tongues of matter which
fall on the star near the equator, due to Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities.
Precise modeling with Monte Carlo simulations shows that those movements could
be observed as high frequency Quasi Periodic Oscillations. We performed a
number of new simulation runs with a much wider set of parameters, focusing on
neutron stars with a small misalignment angle. In most cases we observe
oscillations whose frequency is correlated with the mass accretion rate
$\dot{M}$. Moreover, in some cases double QPOs appear, each of them showing the
same correlation with $\dot{M}$.
[51]
oai:arXiv.org:0909.4785 [pdf] - 901859
Radial distribution of the multiple stellar populations in omega
Centauri
Submitted: 2009-09-25
We present a detailed study of the radial distribution of the multiple
populations identified in the Galactic globular cluster omega Cen. We used both
space-based images (ACS/WFC and WFPC2) and ground-based images (FORS1@VLT and
WFI@2.2m ESO telescopes) to map the cluster from the inner core to the
outskirts (~20 arcmin). These data sets have been used to extract high-accuracy
photometry for the construction of color-magnitude diagrams and astrometric
positions of ~900 000 stars. We find that in the inner ~2 core radii the blue
main sequence (bMS) stars slightly dominate the red main sequence (rMS) in
number. At greater distances from the cluster center, the relative numbers of
bMS stars with respect to rMS drop steeply, out to ~8 arcmin, and then remain
constant out to the limit of our observations. We also find that the dispersion
of the Gaussian that best fits the color distribution within the bMS is
significantly greater than the dispersion of the Gaussian that best fits the
color distribution within the rMS. In addition, the relative number of
intermediate-metallicity red-giant-branch stars which includes the progeny of
the bMS) with respect to the metal-poor component (the progeny of the rMS)
follows a trend similar to that of the main-sequence star-count ratio
N_bMS/N_rMS. The most metal-rich component of the red-giant branch follows the
same distribution as the intermediate-metallicity component. We briefly discuss
the possible implications of the observed radial distribution of the different
stellar components in omega Cen.
[52]
oai:arXiv.org:0809.5268 [pdf] - 16905
Galactic secondary positron flux at the Earth
Submitted: 2008-09-30, last modified: 2009-09-22
Secondary positrons are produced by spallation of cosmic rays within the
interstellar gas. Measurements have been typically expressed in terms of the
positron fraction, which exhibits an increase above 10 GeV. Many scenarios have
been proposed to explain this feature, among them some additional primary
positrons originating from dark matter annihilation in the Galaxy. The PAMELA
satellite has provided high quality data that has enabled high accuracy
statistical analyses to be made, showing that the increase in the positron
fraction extends up to about 100 GeV. It is therefore of paramount importance
to constrain theoretically the expected secondary positron flux to interpret
the observations in an accurate way. We find the secondary positron flux to be
reproduced well by the available observations, and to have theoretical
uncertainties that we quantify to be as large as about one order of magnitude.
We also discuss the positron fraction issue and find that our predictions may
be consistent with the data taken before PAMELA. For PAMELA data, we find that
an excess is probably present after considering uncertainties in the positron
flux, although its amplitude depends strongly on the assumptions made in
relation to the electron flux. By fitting the current electron data, we show
that when considering a soft electron spectrum, the amplitude of the excess
might be far lower than usually claimed. We provide fresh insights that may
help to explain the positron data with or without new physical model
ingredients. PAMELA observations and the forthcoming AMS-02 mission will allow
stronger constraints to be aplaced on the cosmic--ray transport parameters, and
are likely to reduce drastically the theoretical uncertainties.
[53]
oai:arXiv.org:0909.1924 [pdf] - 1017469
Further Searches for RRATs in the Parkes Multi-Beam Pulsar Survey
Submitted: 2009-09-10
We describe the steps involved in performing searches for sources of
transient radio emission such as Rotating Radio Transients (RRATs), and present
10 new transient radio sources discovered in a re-analysis of the Parkes
Multi-beam Pulsar Survey. Followup observations of each new source as well as
one previously known source are also presented. The new sources suggest that
the population of transient radio-emitting neutron stars, and hence the neutron
star population in general, may be even larger than initially predicted. We
highlight the importance of radio frequency interference excision for
single-pulse searches. Also, we discuss some interesting properties of
individual sources and consider the difficulties involved in precisely defining
a RRAT and determining where they fit in with the other known classes of
neutron stars.
[54]
oai:arXiv.org:0909.1165 [pdf] - 1017401
Unusual glitch activity in the RRAT J1819-1458: an exhausted magnetar?
Submitted: 2009-09-07
We present an analysis of regular timing observations of the
high-magnetic-field Rotating Radio Transient (RRAT) J1819$-$1458 obtained using
the 64-m Parkes and 76-m Lovell radio telescopes over the past five years.
During this time, the RRAT has suffered two significant glitches with
fractional frequency changes of $0.6\times10^{-6}$ and $0.1\times10^{-6}$.
Glitches of this magnitude are a phenomenon displayed by both radio pulsars and
magnetars. However, the behaviour of J1819$-$1458 following these glitches is
quite different to that which follows glitches in other neutron stars, since
the glitch activity resulted in a significant long-term net decrease in the
slow-down rate. If such glitches occur every 30 years, the spin-down rate, and
by inference the magnetic dipole moment, will drop to zero on a timescale of a
few thousand years. There are also significant increases in the rate of pulse
detection and in the radio pulse energy immediately following the glitches.
[55]
oai:arXiv.org:0908.0819 [pdf] - 1003312
A 100-kpc inverse Compton X-ray halo around 4C60.07 at z=3.79
Smail, Ian;
Lehmer, B. D.;
Ivison, R. J.;
Alexander, D. M.;
Bower, R. G.;
Stevens, J. A.;
Geach, J. E.;
Scharf, C. A.;
Coppin, K. E. K.;
van Breugel, W. J. M.;
.
Submitted: 2009-08-06
We analyse a 100-ks Chandra observation of the powerful radio galaxy, 4C60.07
at z=3.79. We identify extended X-ray emission with Lx~10^45 erg/s across a
~90-kpc region around the radio galaxy. The energetics of this X-ray halo and
its morphological similarity to the radio emission from the galaxy suggest that
it arises from inverse Compton (IC) scattering, by relativistic electrons in
the radio jets, of Cosmic Microwave Background photons and potentially
far-infrared photons from the dusty starbursts around this galaxy. The X-ray
emission has a similar extent and morphology to the Ly-alpha halo around the
galaxy, suggesting that it may be ionising this halo. Indeed we find that the
GHz-radio and X-ray and Ly-alpha luminosities of the halo around 4C60.07 are
identical to those of 4C41.17 (also at z=3.8) implying that these three
components are linked by a single physical process. This is only the second
example of highly-extended IC emission known at z>3, but it underlines the
potential importance of IC emission in the formation of the most massive
galaxies at high redshifts. In addition, we detect two X-ray luminous active
galactic nuclei (AGN) within ~30kpc of the radio galaxy. These two companion
AGN imply that the radio and starburst activity in the radio galaxy is
triggered through multiple mergers of massive progenitors on a short timescale,
~100Myrs. These discoveries demonstrate the wealth of information which
sensitive X-ray observations can yield into the formation of massive galaxies
at high redshifts.
[56]
oai:arXiv.org:0802.4253 [pdf] - 10531
VINE -- A numerical code for simulating astrophysical systems using
particles II: Implementation and performance characteristics
Submitted: 2008-02-28, last modified: 2009-07-10
We continue our presentation of VINE. We begin with a description of relevant
architectural properties of the serial and shared memory parallel computers on
which VINE is intended to run, and describe their influences on the design of
the code itself. We continue with a detailed description of a number of
optimizations made to the layout of the particle data in memory and to our
implementation of a binary tree used to access that data for use in
gravitational force calculations and searches for SPH neighbor particles. We
describe modifications to the code necessary to obtain forces efficiently from
special purpose `GRAPE' hardware. We conclude with an extensive series of
performance tests, which demonstrate that the code can be run efficiently and
without modification in serial on small workstations or in parallel using
OpenMP compiler directives on large scale, shared memory parallel machines. We
analyze the effects of the code optimizations and estimate that they improve
its overall performance by more than an order of magnitude over that obtained
by many other tree codes. Scaled parallel performance of the gravity and SPH
calculations, together the most costly components of most simulations, is
nearly linear up to maximum machine sizes available to us (120 processors on an
Origin~3000). At similar accuracy, performance of VINE, used in GRAPE-tree
mode, is approximately a factor two slower than that of VINE, used in host-only
mode. Optimizations of the GRAPE/host communications could improve the speed by
as much as a factor of three, but have not yet been implemented in VINE.
[57]
oai:arXiv.org:0904.2845 [pdf] - 1001958
Building a control sample for galaxy pairs
Submitted: 2009-04-18, last modified: 2009-06-18
Several observational works have attempted to isolate the effects of galaxy
interactions by comparing galaxies in pairs with isolated galaxies.
However, different authors have proposed different ways to build these
so-called control samples (CS). By using mock galaxy catalogues of the SDSS-DR4
built up from the Millennium Simulation, we explore how the way of building a
CS might introduce biases which could affect the interpretation of results. We
make use of the fact that the physics of interactions is not included in the
semianalytic model, to infer that any difference between the mock control and
pair samples can be ascribed to selection biases. Thus, we find that galaxies
in pairs artificially tend to be older and more bulge-dominated, and to have
less cold gas and different metallicities than their isolated counterparts.
Also because of a biased selection, galaxies in pairs tend to live in higher
density environments, and in haloes of larger masses. We find that imposing
constraints on redshift, stellar masses and local densities diminishes the
selection biases by ~70%. Based on these findings, we suggest observers how to
build an unique and unbiased CS in order to reveal the effect of galaxy
interactions.
[58]
oai:arXiv.org:0904.4455 [pdf] - 1002056
The Young Stellar Population of IC1613. I. A New Catalogue of OB
Associations
Submitted: 2009-04-28
Context: Determining the parameters of massive stars is crucial to understand
many processes in galaxies and the Universe, since these objects are important
sources of ionization, chemical enrichment and momentum. 10m class telescopes
enable us to perform detailed quantitative spectroscopic analyses of massive
stars in other galaxies, sampling areas of different metallicity. Relating the
stars to their environment is crucial to understand the physical processes
ruling their formation and evolution.
Aims: In preparation for the GTC, our goal is to build a catalogue of massive
star candidates in the metal-poor irregular galaxy IC1613 with high astrometric
accuracy, apt for the current generation of multi-object spectrographs. A
census of OB associations in this galaxy is also needed, to provide important
additional information about age and environment of the candidate OB stars.
Methods: From INT-WFC observations, we have built an astrometric and
photometric catalogue of stars in IC1613. Candidate blue massive stars are
preselected from their colors. A friends-of-friends algorithm is developed to
find their clustering in the galaxy. While a common physical origin for all the
members of the associations cannot be ensured, this is a necessary first step
to place candidate OB stars in a population context.
Results: We have produced a deep catalogue of targets in IC1613 that covers a
large field of view. To achieve high astrometric accuracy a new astrometric
procedure is developed for the INT-WFC data. We have also built a catalogue of
OB associations in IC1613. We have found that they concentrate in the central
regions, specially in the HII bubbles. The study of extinction confirms that it
is patchy, with local values of color-excess above the foreground value.
[59]
oai:arXiv.org:0904.2851 [pdf] - 1001959
Global environmental effects versus galaxy interactions
Submitted: 2009-04-18, last modified: 2009-04-21
We explore properties of close galaxy pairs and merging systems selected from
the SDSS-DR4 in different environments with the aim to assess the relative
importance of the role of interactions over global environmental processes. For
this purpose, we perform a comparative study of galaxies with and without close
companions as a function of local density and host-halo mass, carefully
removing sources of possible biases. We find that at low and high local density
environments, colours and morphologies of close galaxy pairs are very similar
to those of isolated galaxies. At intermediate densities, we detect significant
differences, indicating that close pairs could have experienced a more rapid
transition onto the red sequence than isolated galaxies. The presence of a
correlation between colours and morphologies indicates that the physical
mechanism responsible for the colour transformation also operates changing
galaxy morphologies. Regardless of dark matter halo mass, we show that the
percentage of red galaxies in close pairs and in the control sample are
comparable at low and high local density environments. However, at intermediate
local densities, the gap in the red fraction between close pairs and the
control galaxies increases from ~10% in low mass haloes up to ~50% in the most
massive ones. Our findings suggest that in intermediate density environments
galaxies are efficiently pre-processed by close encounters and mergers before
entering higher local density regions. (Abridge)
[60]
oai:arXiv.org:0901.2074 [pdf] - 900567
A low energy core-collapse supernova without a hydrogen envelope
Valenti, Stefano;
Pastorello, Andrea;
Cappellaro, Enrico;
Benetti, Stefano;
Mazzali, Paolo;
Manteca, Jose;
Taubenberger, Stefan;
Elias-Rosa, Nancy;
Ferrando, Rafael;
Harutyunyan, Avet;
Hentunen, Veli-Pekka;
Nissinen, Markku;
Pian, Elena;
Turatto, Massimo;
Zampieri, Luca;
Smartt, Stephen J.;
.
Submitted: 2009-01-14, last modified: 2009-03-24
The final fate of massive stars depends on many factors, including mass,
rotation rate, magnetic fields and metallicity. Theory suggests that some
massive stars (initially greater than 25-30 solar masses) end up as Wolf-Rayet
stars which are deficient in hydrogen because of mass loss through strong
stellar winds. The most massive of these stars have cores which may form a
black hole and theory predicts that the resulting explosion produces ejecta of
low kinetic energy, a faint optical display and a small mass fraction of
radioactive nickel(1,2,3). An alternative origin for low energy supernovae is
the collapse of the oxygen-neon core of a relatively lowmass star (7-9 solar
masses) through electron capture(4,5). However no weak, hydrogen deficient,
core-collapse supernovae are known. Here we report that such faint, low energy
core-collapse supernovae do exist, and show that SN2008ha is the faintest
hydrogen poor supernova ever observed. We propose that other similar events
have been observed but they have been misclassified as peculiar thermonuclear
supernovae (sometimes labelled SN2002cx-like events(6)). This discovery could
link these faint supernovae to some long duration gamma-ray bursts. Extremely
faint, hydrogen-stripped core-collapse supernovae have been proposed to produce
those long gamma-ray bursts whose afterglows do not show evidence of
association with supernovae (7,8,9).
[61]
oai:arXiv.org:0901.0799 [pdf] - 166673
Evolution and Nucleosynthesis of Extremely Metal Poor & Metal-Free Low-
and Intermediate-Mass Stars I: Stellar Yield Tables and the CEMPs
Submitted: 2009-01-07
[Abridged] We calculate the structural evolution and nucleosynthesis of a
grid of models covering the metallicity range: -6.5 < [Fe/H] < -3.0 (plus Z=0),
and mass range: 0.85 < M < 3.0 Msun, amounting to 20 stars in total. In this
paper, the first of a series describing and analysing this large data set, we
present the resulting stellar yields. Many of the models experience violent
nuclear burning episodes not seen at higher metallicities. We refer to these
events as `Dual Flashes'. These events have also been reported by previous
studies. Some of the material processed by the Dual Flashes is dredged up
causing significant surface pollution with a distinct chemical composition. We
also analyse the yields in terms of C and N, comparing them to the observed
CEMP abundances. At the lowest metallicities ([Fe/H] < -4.0) we find the yields
to contain ~1 to 2 dex too much carbon, in agreement with all previous studies.
At higher metallicities ([Fe/H] = -3.0), where the observed data set is much
larger, all our models produce yields with [C/Fe] values consistent with those
observed in the most C-rich CEMPs. However it is only the low-mass models that
undergo the Dual Shell Flash (which occurs at the start of the TPAGB) that can
best reproduce the C and N observations. Normal Third Dredge-Up can not
reproduce the observations because at these metallicities intermediate mass
models (M > 2 Msun) suffer HBB which converts the C to N thus lowering [C/N]
well below the observations, whilst if TDU were to occur in the low-mass (M < 1
Msun) models (we do not find it to occur in our models), the yields would be
expected to be C-rich only, which is at odds with the `dual pollution' of C and
N generally observed in the CEMPs.
[62]
oai:arXiv.org:0810.4150 [pdf] - 315227
Determining Star Formation Rates for Infrared Galaxies
Submitted: 2008-10-22, last modified: 2008-12-10
We show that measures of star formation rates (SFRs) for infrared galaxies
using either single-band 24 um or extinction-corrected Paschen-alpha
luminosities are consistent in the total infrared luminosity = L(TIR) ~ 10^10
L_sun range. MIPS 24 micron photometry can yield star formation rates
accurately from this luminosity upward: SFR(M_sun/yr) = 7.8 x 10^-10 L(24 um,
L_sun) from L(TIR) = 5 x 10^9 L_sun to 10^11 L_sun, and SFR = 7.8 x 10^-10 L(24
um, L_sun) x (7.76 x 10^-11 L(24))^0.048 for higher L(TIR). For galaxies with
L(TIR) >= 10^10 L_sun, these new expressions should provide SFRs to within 0.2
dex. For L(TIR) >= 10^11 L_sun, we find that the SFR of infrared galaxies is
significantly underestimated using extinction-corrected Pa-alpha (and
presumably using any other optical or near infrared recombination lines). As a
part of this work, we constructed spectral energy distribution (SED) templates
for eleven luminous and ultraluminous purely star forming infrared galaxies
(LIRGs and ULIRGs) and over the spectral range 0.4 microns to 30 cm. We use
these templates and the SINGS data to construct average templates from 5
microns to 30 cm for infrared galaxies with L(TIR) = 5 x 10^9 to 10^13 L_sun.
All of these templates are made available on line.
[63]
oai:arXiv.org:0811.3201 [pdf] - 18703
Fabrication and Test of Pixelated CZT Detectors with Different Pixel
Pitches and Thicknesses
Li, Q.;
Garson, A.;
Dowkontt, P.;
Martin, J.;
Beilicke, M.;
Jung, I.;
Groza, M.;
Burger, A.;
De Geronimo, G.;
Krawczynski, H.;
.;
.;
.;
.
Submitted: 2008-11-19
The main methods grown Cadmium Zinc Telluride (CZT) crystals with high yield
and excellent homogeneity are Modified Horizontal Bridgman (MHB) and High
Pressure Bridgman (HPB) processes, respectively. In this contribution, the
readout system based on two 32-channel NCI-ASICs for pixellated CZT detector
arrays has been developed and tested. The CZT detectors supplied by Orbotech
(MHB) and eV products (HPB) are tested by NCI-ASIC readout system. The CZT
detectors have an array of 8x8 or 11x11 pixel anodes fabricated on the anode
surface with the area up to 2 cm x2 cm and the thickness of CZT detectors
ranges from 0.5 cm to 1 cm. Energy spectra resolution and electron
mobility-lifetime products of 8x8 pixels CZT detector with different
thicknesses have been investigated.
[64]
oai:arXiv.org:0811.3201 [pdf] - 18703
Fabrication and Test of Pixelated CZT Detectors with Different Pixel
Pitches and Thicknesses
Li, Q.;
Garson, A.;
Dowkontt, P.;
Martin, J.;
Beilicke, M.;
Jung, I.;
Groza, M.;
Burger, A.;
De Geronimo, G.;
Krawczynski, H.;
.;
.;
.;
.
Submitted: 2008-11-19
The main methods grown Cadmium Zinc Telluride (CZT) crystals with high yield
and excellent homogeneity are Modified Horizontal Bridgman (MHB) and High
Pressure Bridgman (HPB) processes, respectively. In this contribution, the
readout system based on two 32-channel NCI-ASICs for pixellated CZT detector
arrays has been developed and tested. The CZT detectors supplied by Orbotech
(MHB) and eV products (HPB) are tested by NCI-ASIC readout system. The CZT
detectors have an array of 8x8 or 11x11 pixel anodes fabricated on the anode
surface with the area up to 2 cm x2 cm and the thickness of CZT detectors
ranges from 0.5 cm to 1 cm. Energy spectra resolution and electron
mobility-lifetime products of 8x8 pixels CZT detector with different
thicknesses have been investigated.
[65]
oai:arXiv.org:0811.3201 [pdf] - 18703
Fabrication and Test of Pixelated CZT Detectors with Different Pixel
Pitches and Thicknesses
Li, Q.;
Garson, A.;
Dowkontt, P.;
Martin, J.;
Beilicke, M.;
Jung, I.;
Groza, M.;
Burger, A.;
De Geronimo, G.;
Krawczynski, H.;
.;
.;
.;
.
Submitted: 2008-11-19
The main methods grown Cadmium Zinc Telluride (CZT) crystals with high yield
and excellent homogeneity are Modified Horizontal Bridgman (MHB) and High
Pressure Bridgman (HPB) processes, respectively. In this contribution, the
readout system based on two 32-channel NCI-ASICs for pixellated CZT detector
arrays has been developed and tested. The CZT detectors supplied by Orbotech
(MHB) and eV products (HPB) are tested by NCI-ASIC readout system. The CZT
detectors have an array of 8x8 or 11x11 pixel anodes fabricated on the anode
surface with the area up to 2 cm x2 cm and the thickness of CZT detectors
ranges from 0.5 cm to 1 cm. Energy spectra resolution and electron
mobility-lifetime products of 8x8 pixels CZT detector with different
thicknesses have been investigated.
[66]
oai:arXiv.org:0811.3201 [pdf] - 18703
Fabrication and Test of Pixelated CZT Detectors with Different Pixel
Pitches and Thicknesses
Li, Q.;
Garson, A.;
Dowkontt, P.;
Martin, J.;
Beilicke, M.;
Jung, I.;
Groza, M.;
Burger, A.;
De Geronimo, G.;
Krawczynski, H.;
.;
.;
.;
.
Submitted: 2008-11-19
The main methods grown Cadmium Zinc Telluride (CZT) crystals with high yield
and excellent homogeneity are Modified Horizontal Bridgman (MHB) and High
Pressure Bridgman (HPB) processes, respectively. In this contribution, the
readout system based on two 32-channel NCI-ASICs for pixellated CZT detector
arrays has been developed and tested. The CZT detectors supplied by Orbotech
(MHB) and eV products (HPB) are tested by NCI-ASIC readout system. The CZT
detectors have an array of 8x8 or 11x11 pixel anodes fabricated on the anode
surface with the area up to 2 cm x2 cm and the thickness of CZT detectors
ranges from 0.5 cm to 1 cm. Energy spectra resolution and electron
mobility-lifetime products of 8x8 pixels CZT detector with different
thicknesses have been investigated.
[67]
oai:arXiv.org:0811.1971 [pdf] - 18463
New views on bar pattern speeds from the NUGA survey
Casasola, V.;
Garcia-Burillo, S.;
Combes, F.;
Hunt, L. K.;
Krips, M.;
Schinnerer, E.;
Baker, A. J.;
Boone, F.;
Eckart, A.;
Leon, S.;
Neri, R.;
Tacconi, L. J.;
.
Submitted: 2008-11-12
We present a review on bar pattern speeds from preliminary results in the
context of the Nuclei of Galaxies (NUGA) project. The large variety of
molecular circumnuclear morphologies found in NUGA is a challenging result that
implies the refinement of current dynamical models of galaxies.
[68]
oai:arXiv.org:0811.0315 [pdf] - 18128
CRASH2: colored packets and other updates
Submitted: 2008-11-03
In this paper we report on the improvements implemented in the cosmological
radiative transfer code CRASH. In particular we present a new multi-frequency
algorithm for spectra sampling which makes use of colored photon packets: we
discuss the need for the multi-frequency approach, describe its implementation
and present the improved CRASH performance in reproducing the effects of
ionizing radiation with an arbitrary spectrum. We further discuss minor changes
in the code implementation which allow for more efficient performance and an
increased precision.
[69]
oai:arXiv.org:0810.3830 [pdf] - 383919
Capability of the PAMELA Time-Of-Flight to identify light nuclei:
results from a beam test calibration
Campana, D.;
Carbone, R.;
De Rosa, G.;
Osteria, G.;
Russo, S.;
Menn, W.;
Malvezzi, V.;
Marcelli, L.;
Picozza, P.;
Sparvoli, R.;
Bonechi, L.;
Bongi, M.;
Ricciarini, S.;
Vannuccini, E.;
.
Submitted: 2008-10-21
PAMELA is a space telescope orbiting around the Earth since June 2006. The
scientific objectives addressed by the mission are the measurement of the
antiprotons and positrons spectra in cosmic rays, the hunt for anti-nuclei as
well as the determination of light nuclei fluxes from Hydrogen to Oxygen in a
wide energy range and with very high statistics. In this paper the charge
discrimination capabilities of the PAMELA Time-Of-Flight system for light
nuclei, determined during a beam test calibration, will be presented.
[70]
oai:arXiv.org:0808.2292 [pdf] - 15446
Multi-telescope timing of PSR J1518+4904
Submitted: 2008-08-17
PSR J1518+4904 is one of only 9 known double neutron star systems. These
systems are highly valuable for measuring the masses of neutron stars,
measuring the effects of gravity, and testing gravitational theories. We
determine an improved timing solution for a mildly relativistic double neutron
star system, combining data from multiple telescopes. We set better constraints
on relativistic parameters and the separate masses of the system, and discuss
the evolution of PSR J1518+4904 in the context of other double neutron star
systems. PSR J1518+4904 has been regularly observed for more than 10 years by
the European Pulsar Timing Array (EPTA) network using the Westerbork, Jodrell
Bank, Effelsberg and Nancay radio telescopes. The data were analysed using the
updated timing software Tempo2. We have improved the timing solution for this
double neutron star system. The periastron advance has been refined and a
significant detection of proper motion is presented. It is not likely that more
post-Keplerian parameters, with which the individual neutron star masses and
the inclination angle of the system can be determined separately, can be
measured in the near future. Using a combination of the high-quality data sets
present in the EPTA collaboration, extended with the original GBT data, we have
constrained the masses in the system to m_p<1.17 msun and m_c>1.55 msun (95.4%
confidence), and the inclination angle of the orbit to be less than 47 degrees
(99%). From this we derive that the pulsar in this system possibly has one of
the lowest neutron star masses measured to date. From evolutionary
considerations it seems likely that the companion star, despite its high mass,
was formed in an electron-capture supernova.
[71]
oai:arXiv.org:0806.4088 [pdf] - 13878
X-ray hiccups from SgrA* observed by XMM-Newton. The second brightest
flare and three moderate flares caught in half a day
Porquet, D.;
Grosso, N.;
Predehl, P.;
Hasinger, G.;
Yusef-Zadeh, F.;
Aschenbach, B.;
Trap, G.;
Melia, F.;
Warwick, R. S.;
Goldwurm, A.;
Belanger, G.;
Tanaka, Y.;
Genzel, R.;
Dodds-Eden, K.;
Sakano, M.;
Ferrando, P.;
.
Submitted: 2008-06-25
[truncated] In Spring 2007, we observed SgrA* with XMM with a total exposure
of ~230ks. We have performed timing and spectral analysis of the new X-ray
flares detected during this campaign. To study the range of flare spectral
properties, in a consistent manner, we have also reprocessed, using the same
analysis procedure and the latest calibration, archived XMM data of previously
reported rapid flares. The dust scattering was taken into account during the
spectral fitting. We also used Chandra archived observations of the quiescent
state of SgrA* for comparison. On April 4, 2007, we observed for the first time
within a time interval of ~1/2 day, an enhanced incidence rate of X-ray
flaring, with a bright flare followed by three flares of more moderate
amplitude. The former event represents the second brightest X-ray flare from
Sgr A* on record. This new bright flare exhibits similar light-curve shape
(nearly symmetrical), duration (~3ks) and spectral characteristics to the very
bright flare observed in October 3, 2002. The measured spectral parameters of
the new bright flare, assuming an absorbed power law model taken into account
dust scattering effect, are N_H=12.3(+2.1,-1.8)e22 cm-2 and Gamma~2.3+/-0.3
calculated at the 90% c.l. The spectral parameter fits of the sum of the three
following moderate flares, while lower, are compatible within the error bars
with those of the bright flares. The column density found, for a power-law,
during the flares is at least two times higher than the value expected from the
(dust) visual extinction toward SgrA* (AV~25 mag). However, our fitting of the
SgrA* quiescent spectra obtained with Chandra shows that an excess of column
density is already present during the non-flaring phase. The two brightest
X-ray flares observed so far from SgrA* exhibited similar soft spectra.
[72]
oai:arXiv.org:0805.3501 [pdf] - 12872
On the Detectability of Lyman-alpha Emission in Star-forming Galaxies:
The Role of Dust
Submitted: 2008-05-22
Lyman-alpha is now widely used to investigate the galaxy formation and
evolution in the high redshift universe. However, without a rigorous
understanding of the processes which regulate the Lya escape fraction, physical
interpretations of high-z observations remain questionable. We examine six
nearby star-forming galaxies to disentangle the role of the dust from other
parameters such as gas kinematics, geometry and ISM morphology in the
obscuration of Ly-alpha. Thereby we aim to understand the Ly-a escape physics
and infer the implications for high-redshift studies. We use HST/ACS to produce
continuum-subtracted Lya maps, and ground-based observations (ESO/NTT and NOT)
to map the Halpha emission and the extinction E(B-V) in the gas phase derived
from the Balmer decrement Halpha/Hbeta. When large outflows are present, the
Lya emission appears not to correlate with the dust content, confirming the
role of the HI kinematics in the escape of Lya photons. In the case of a dense,
static HI covering, we observe a damped absorption with a declining
relationship between Lya and E(B-V). We found that the Lya escape fraction does
not exceed 10% in all our galaxies and is mostly about 3% or below. Finally,
because of the radiative transfer complexity of the Lya line, star formation
rate based on Lya luminosity is underestimated with respect to that derived
from UV luminosity. The failure of simple dust correction to recover the
intrinsic Lya/Ha ratio or the total star formation rate should prompt us to be
more cautious when interpreting high-z observations and related properties,
such as SFRs based on Lya alone. To this end we propose a more realistic
calibration for SFR(Lya) which accounts for dust attenuation and resonant
scattering effects via the Lya escape fraction.
[73]
oai:arXiv.org:0805.1930 [pdf] - 12596
Effects of AGN feedback on LCDM galaxies
Submitted: 2008-05-13
We study the effects of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) feedback on the
formation and evolution of galaxies in a semi-analytic model of galaxy
formation. This model is an improved version of the one described by Cora
(2006), which now considers the growth of black holes (BHs) as driven by (i)
gas accretion during merger-driven starbursts and mergers with other BHs, (ii)
accretion during starbursts triggered by disc instabilities, and (iii)
accretion of gas cooled from quasi-hydrostatic hot gas haloes. It is assumed
that feedback from AGN operates in the later case. The model has been
calibrated in order to reproduce observational correlations between BH mass and
mass, velocity dispersion, and absolute magnitudes of the galaxy bulge. AGN
feedback has a strong impact on reducing or even suppressing gas cooling, an
effect that becomes important at lower redshifts. This phenomenon helps to
reproduce the observed galaxy luminosity function (LF) in the optical and near
IR bands at z=0, and the cosmic star formation rate and stellar mass functions
over a wide redshift range (0<z<5). It also allows to have a population of
massive galaxies already in place at z>1, which are mostly early-type and have
older and redder stellar populations than lower mass galaxies, reproducing the
observed bimodality in the galaxy colour distribution, and the morphological
fractions. The evolution of the optical QSO LF is also reproduced, provided
that the presence of a significant fraction of obscured QSOs is assumed. We
explore the effects of AGN feedback during starbursts and new recent
prescriptions for dynamical friction time-scales. (ABRIDGED)
[74]
oai:arXiv.org:0804.3589 [pdf] - 11999
Confirmation of a Kinematic Diagnostic for Face-On B/P Bulges
Submitted: 2008-04-22
We present the results of high resolution absorption-line spectroscopy of 3
face-on galaxies, NGC 98, NGC 600, and NGC 1703 with the aim of searching for
box/peanut (B/P)-shaped bulges. These observations test and confirm, for the
first, time the prediction that face-on B/P-shaped bulges can be recognized by
two minima in the profile along the bar's major axis of the fourth
Gauss-Hermite moment h_4 of the line-of-sight velocity distribution (LOSVD). In
NGC 98, a clear double minimum in h_4 is present along the major axis of the
bar and before the end of the bar, as predicted. In contrast, in NGC 600, which
is also a barred galaxy but lacks a substantial bulge, we do not find any
significant kinematic signature for a B/P-shaped bulge. In NGC 1703, which is
an unbarred control galaxy, we found no evidence of a B/P bulge. We also show
directly that the LOSVD is broader at the location of the h_4 minimum in NGC 98
than elsewhere. This more direct method avoids possible artifacts associated
with the degeneracy between the measurement of line-of-sight velocity
dispersion and h_4.
[75]
oai:arXiv.org:0709.4252 [pdf] - 5389
Global Models for the Evolution of Embedded, Accreting Protostellar
Disks
Submitted: 2007-09-27, last modified: 2008-02-12
Most analytic work to date on protostellar disks has focused on those in
isolation from their environments. However, observations are now beginning to
probe the earliest, most embedded phases of star formation, during which disks
are rapidly accreting from their parent cores and cannot be modeled in
isolation. We present a simple, one-zone model of protostellar accretion disks
with high mass infall rates. Our model combines a self-consistent calculation
of disk temperatures with an approximate treatment of angular momentum
transport via two mechanisms. We use this model to survey the properties of
protostellar disks across a wide range of stellar masses and evolutionary
times, and make predictions for disks' masses, sizes, spiral structure, and
fragmentation that will be directly testable by future large-scale surveys of
deeply embedded disks. We define a dimensionless accretion-rotation parameter
which, in conjunction with the disk's temperature, controls the disk evolution.
We track the dominant mode of angular momentum transport, and demonstrate that
for stars with final masses greater than roughly one solar mass, gravitational
instabilities are the most important mechanism as most of the mass accumulates.
We predict that binary formation through disk fission, fragmentation of the
disk into small objects, and spiral arm strength all increase in importance to
higher stellar masses.
[76]
oai:arXiv.org:0802.0518 [pdf] - 9758
Velocity Structure in the Orion Nebula. II. Emission Line Atlas of
Partially Ionized to Fully Ionized Gas
Submitted: 2008-02-04
We present an atlas of three-dimensional (position-position-velocity) spectra
of the Orion Nebula in optical emission lines from a variety of different
ionization stages: [O I] 6300, [S II] 6716,6731, [N II] 6584, [S III] 6312, H
alpha 6563, and [O III] 5007. These transitions provide point to point
information about the physical structure and kinematics of the nebula at an
effective resolution of 3'' x 2'' x 10 km/s, clearly showing the large scale
behavior of the ionized gas and the presence of localized phenomena such as
Herbig-Haro outflows. As an example application of the atlas, we present a
statistical analysis of the widths of the H alpha, [O III], and [N II] lines
that permits a determination of the mean electron temperature in the nebula of
(9200 +/- 400) K. We also find, in contradiction to previous claims, that the
non-thermal line broadening is not significantly different between
recombination lines and collisional lines.
[77]
oai:arXiv.org:0709.3763 [pdf] - 554018
The MAGIC Project: Contributions to ICRC 2007
Albert, J.;
Aliu, E.;
Anderhub, H.;
Antoranz, P.;
Armada, A.;
Baixeras, C.;
Barrio, J. A.;
Bartko, H.;
Bastieri, D.;
Becker, J. K.;
Bednarek, W.;
Berger, K.;
Bigongiari, C.;
Biland, A.;
Bock, R. K.;
Bordas, P.;
Bosch-Ramon, V.;
Bretz, T.;
Britvitch, I.;
Cabras, G.;
Camara, M.;
Carmona, E.;
Chilingarian, A.;
Coarasa, J. A.;
Commichau, S.;
Contreras, J. L.;
Cortina, J.;
Costado, M. T.;
Curtef, V.;
Danielyan, V.;
Dazzi, F.;
De Angelis, A.;
Delgado, C.;
Reyes, R. de los;
De Lotto, B.;
De Maria, M.;
De Sabata, F.;
Dorner, D.;
Doro, M.;
Errando, M.;
Fagiolini, M.;
Ferenc, D.;
FernÓÅndez, E.;
Firpo, R.;
Flix, J.;
Fonseca, M. V.;
Font, L.;
Fuchs, M.;
Galante, N.;
GarcÓ-a-LÓÃpez, R. J.;
Garczarczyk, M.;
Gaug, M.;
Giller, M.;
Goebel, F.;
Hakobyan, D.;
Hayashida, M.;
Hengstebeck, T.;
Herrero, A.;
HÓÆhne, D.;
Hose, J.;
Hsu, C. C.;
Jacon, P.;
Jogler, T.;
Kosyra, R.;
Kranich, D.;
Kritzer, R.;
Laille, A.;
Lindfors, E.;
Lombardi, S.;
Longo, F.;
LÓÃpez, J.;
LÓÃpez, M.;
Lorenz, E.;
Majumdar, P.;
Maneva, G.;
Mannheim, K.;
Mansutti, O.;
Mariotti, M.;
MartÓ-nez, M.;
Mazin, D.;
Merck, C.;
Meucci, M.;
Meyer, M.;
Miranda, J. M.;
Mirzoyan, R.;
Mizobuchi, S.;
Moralejo, A.;
Nieto, D.;
Nilsson, K.;
Ninkovic, J.;
na-Wilhelmi, E. O;
Otte, N.;
Oya, I.;
Paneque, D.;
Paoletti, R.;
Paredes, J. M.;
Pasanen, M.;
Pascoli, D.;
Pauss, F.;
Pegna, R.;
Persic, M.;
Peruzzo, L.;
Piccioli, A.;
Prandini, E.;
Puchades, N.;
Raymers, A.;
Rhode, W.;
RibÓÃ, M.;
Rico, J.;
Rissi, M.;
Robert, A.;
RÓÌgamer, S.;
Saggion, A.;
Saito, T. Y.;
SÓÅnchez, A.;
Sartori, P.;
Scalzotto, V.;
Scapin, V.;
Schmitt, R.;
Schweizer, T.;
Shayduk, M.;
Shinozaki, K.;
Shore, S. N.;
Sidro, N.;
SillanpÓ?Ó?, A.;
Sobczynska, D.;
Spanier, F.;
Stamerra, A.;
Stark, L. S.;
Takalo, L.;
Temnikov, P.;
Tescaro, D.;
Teshima, M.;
Torres, D. F.;
Turini, N.;
Vankov, H.;
Venturini, A.;
Vitale, V.;
Wagner, R. M.;
Wibig, T.;
Wittek, W.;
Zandanel, F.;
Zanin, R.;
Zapatero, J.;
.;
collaboration, for the MAGIC
Submitted: 2007-09-24, last modified: 2007-12-10
The MAGIC Project: Contributions to ICRC 2007, Merida, Mexico. Contents pages
for the Contribution on behalf of the MAGIC Collaboration to the 30th ICRC that
took place in July 2007 in Merida, Mexico. The contents are in html form with
clickable links to the papers that exist on the Astrophysics archive. We hope
that this will make it easier to access the output of the conference in a
systematic way. Comments on how useful this is/ how it could be improved should
be sent to michela.demaria@iuav.it.
[78]
oai:arXiv.org:0710.3461 [pdf] - 6157
The Frequency of Large Radius Hot and Very Hot Jupiters in omega
Centauri
Submitted: 2007-10-18
We present the results of a deep, wide-field search for transiting `Hot
Jupiter (HJ)' planets in the globular cluster omega Centauri. As a result of a
25-night observing run with the ANU 40-inch telescope at Siding Spring
Observatory, a total of 109,726 stellar time series composed of 787 independent
data points were produced with differential photometry in a 52x52' (0.75 deg^2)
field centered on the cluster core, but extending well beyond. Taking into
account the size of transit signals as a function of stellar radius, 45,406
stars have suitable photometric accuracy (<=0.045 mag to V=19.5) to search for
transits. Of this sample, 31,000 stars are expected to be main sequence cluster
members. All stars, both cluster and foreground, were subjected to a rigorous
search for transit signatures; none were found. Extensive Monte Carlo
simulations based on our actual data set allows us to determine the sensitivity
of our survey to planets with radii ~1.5R_Jup, and thus place statistical upper
limits on their occurrence frequency 'F'. Smaller planets are undetectable in
our data. At 95% confidence, the frequency of Very Hot Jupiters (VHJs) with
periods P satisfying 1d<P<3d can be no more than F_VHJ < 1/1040 in omega Cen.
For HJ and VHJ distributed uniformly over the orbital period range 1d<P<5d,
F_VHJ+HJ < 1/600. Our limits on large, short-period planets are comparable to
those recently reported for other Galactic fields, despite being derived with
less telescope time.
[79]
oai:arXiv.org:0710.1840 [pdf] - 5855
A Catalogue of Be Stars in the Direction of the Galactic Bulge
Submitted: 2007-10-09
Detailed studies of Be stars in environments with different metallicities
like the Magellanic Clouds or the Galactic bulge are necessary to understand
the formation and evolution mechanisms of the circumstellar disks. However, a
detailed study of Be stars in the direction of the bulge of our own galaxy has
not been performed until now. We report the first systematic search for Be star
candidates in the direction of the Galactic Bulge. We present the catalogue,
give a brief description of the stellar variability seen, and show some light
curve examples. We searched for stars matching specific criteria of magnitude,
color and variability in the I band. Our search was conducted on the 48 OGLE II
fields of the Galactic Bulge.This search has resulted in 29053 Be star
candidates, 198 of them showing periodic light variations. Nearly 1500 stars in
this final sample are almost certainly Be stars, providing an ideal sample for
spectroscopic multiobject follow-up studies.
[80]
oai:arXiv.org:0709.4659 [pdf] - 5482
Stellar Populations Found in the Central kpc of Four Luminous Compact
Blue Galaxies at Intermediate Redshift
Submitted: 2007-09-28
We investigate the star formation history of the central regions of four
Luminous Compact Blue Galaxies (LCBGs). LCBGs are blue (B-V<0.6), compact
(MU_B<21.5 mag arcsec^-2) galaxies with absolute magnitudes M_B brighter than
-17.5. The LCBGs analyzed here are located at 0.436<z<0.525. They are among the
most luminous (M_B < -20.5), blue (B-V < 0.4) and high surface brightness (MU_B
< 19.0 mag arcsec^-2) of this population. The observational data used were
obtained with the HST/STIS spectrograph, the HST/WF/PC-2 camera and the
HST/NICMOS first camera. We find evidence for multiple stellar populations. One
of them is identified as the ionizing population, and the other one corresponds
to the underlying stellar generation.
The estimated masses of the inferred populations are compatible with the
dynamical masses, which are typically 2--10x 10^9 M_sun. Our models also
indicate that the first episodes of star formation the presented LCBGs
underwent happened between 5 and 7 Gyr ago.
We compare the stellar populations found in LCBGs with the stellar
populations present in bright, local HII galaxies, nearby spheroidal systems
and Blue Compact Dwarf Galaxies. It turns out that the underlying stellar
populations of LCBGs are similar yet bluer to those of local HII galaxies. It
is also the case that the passive color evolution of the LCBGs could convert
them into local Spheroidal galaxies if no further episode of star formation
takes place. Our results help to impose constraints on evolutionary scenarios
for the population of LCBGs found commonly at intermediate redshifts.
[81]
oai:arXiv.org:0708.2740 [pdf] - 4127
Galactic Edge Clouds I: Molecular Line Observations and Chemical
Modelling of Edge Cloud 2
Submitted: 2007-08-21, last modified: 2007-08-28
Edge Cloud 2 (EC2) is a molecular cloud, about 35 pc in size, with one of the
largest galactocentric distances known to exist in the Milky Way. We present
observations of a peak CO emission region in the cloud and use these to
determine its physical characteristics. We calculate a gas temperature of 20 K
and a density of n(H2) ~ 10^4 cm^-3. Based on our CO maps, we estimate the mass
of EC2 at around 10^4 M_sun and continuum observations suggest a dust-to-gas
mass ratio as low as 0.001. Chemical models have been developed to reproduce
the abundances in EC2 and they indicate that: heavy element abundances may be
reduced by a factor of five relative to the solar neighbourhood (similar to
dwarf irregular galaxies and damped Lyman alpha systems); very low extinction
(Av < 4 mag) due to a very low dust-to-gas ratio; an enhanced cosmic ray
ionisation rate; and a higher UV field compared to local interstellar values.
The reduced abundances may be attributed to the low level of star formation in
this region and are probably also related to the continuing infall of
primordial (or low metallicity) halo gas since the Milky Way formed. Finally,
we note that shocks from the old supernova remnant GSH 138-01-94 may have
determined the morphology and dynamics of EC2.
[82]
oai:arXiv.org:0704.3587 [pdf] - 805
Statistics of Core Lifetimes in Numerical Simulations of Turbulent,
Magnetically Supercritical Molecular Clouds
Submitted: 2007-04-26, last modified: 2007-08-08
We present measurements of the mean dense core lifetimes in numerical
simulations of magnetically supercritical, turbulent, isothermal molecular
clouds, in order to compare with observational determinations. "Prestellar"
lifetimes (given as a function of the mean density within the cores, which in
turn is determined by the density threshold n_thr used to define them) are
consistent with observationally reported values, ranging from a few to several
free-fall times. We also present estimates of the fraction of cores in the
"prestellar", "stellar'', and "failed" (those cores that redisperse back into
the environment) stages as a function of n_thr. The number ratios are measured
indirectly in the simulations due to their resolution limitations. Our approach
contains one free parameter, the lifetime of a protostellar object t_yso (Class
0 + Class I stages), which is outside the realm of the simulations. Assuming a
value t_yso = 0.46 Myr, we obtain number ratios of starless to stellar cores
ranging from 4-5 at n_thr = 1.5 x 10^4 cm^-3 to 1 at n_thr = 1.2 x 10^5 cm^-3,
again in good agreement with observational determinations. We also find that
the mass in the failed cores is comparable to that in stellar cores at n_thr =
1.5 x 10^4 cm^-3, but becomes negligible at n_thr = 1.2 x 10^5 cm^-3, in
agreement with recent observational suggestions that at the latter densities
the cores are in general gravitationally dominated. We conclude by noting that
the timescale for core contraction and collapse is virtually the same in the
subcritical, ambipolar diffusion-mediated model of star formation, in the model
of star formation in turbulent supercritical clouds, and in a model
intermediate between the previous two, for currently accepted values of the
clouds' magnetic criticality.
[83]
oai:arXiv.org:0708.0227 [pdf] - 3641
Lateral distribution and the energy determination of showers along the
ankle
Submitted: 2007-08-01
The normalization constant of the lateral distribution function (LDF) of an
extensive air shower is a monotonous (almost linear) increasing function of the
energy of the primary. Therefore, the interpolated signal at some fixed
distance from the core can be calibrated to estimate the energy of the shower.
There is, somehow surprisingly, a reconstructed optimal distance, r_{opt}, at
which the effects on the inferred signal, S(r_{opt}), of the uncertainties on
true core location, LDF functional form and shower-to-shower fluctuations are
minimized. We calculate the value of r_{opt} as a function of surface detector
separation, energy and zenith angle and we demonstrate the advantage of using
the r_{opt} value of each individual shower instead of a same fixed distance
for every shower, specially in dealing with events with saturated stations. The
effects on the determined spectrum are also shown.
[84]
oai:arXiv.org:0706.3777 [pdf] - 2558
Using VO tools to investigate distant radio starbursts hosting obscured
AGN in the HDF(N) region
Richards, A. M. S.;
Muxlow, T. W. B.;
Beswick, R.;
Allen, M. G.;
Benson, K.;
Dickson, R. C.;
Garrett, M. A.;
Garrington, S. T.;
Gonzalez-Solarez, E.;
Harrison, P. A.;
Holloway, A. J.;
Kettenis, M. M.;
Laing, R. A.;
Richards, E. A.;
Thrall, H.;
van Langevelde, H. J.;
Walton, N. A.;
Wilkinson, P. N.;
Winstanley, N.;
.
Submitted: 2007-06-26
A 10-arcmin field around the HDF(N) contains 92 radio sources >40 uJy,
resolved by MERLIN+VLA at 0".2-2".0 resolution. 55 have Chandra X-ray
counterparts including 18 with a hard X-ray photon index and high luminosity
characteristic of a type-II (obscured) AGN. >70% of the radio sources have been
classified as starbursts or AGN using radio morphologies, spectral indices and
comparisons with optical appearance and MIR emission. Starbursts outnumber
radio AGN 3:1. This study extends the VO methods previously used to identify
X-ray-selected obscured type-II AGN to investigate whether very luminous radio
and X-ray emission originates from different phenomena in the same galaxy. The
high-redshift starbursts have typical sizes of 5--10 kpc and star formation
rates of ~1000 Msun/yr. There is no correlation between radio and X-ray
luminosities nor spectral indices at z>~1.3. ~70% of both the radio-selected
AGN and the starburst samples were detected by Chandra. The X-ray luminosity
indicates the presence of an AGN in at least half of the 45 cross-matched radio
starbursts, of which 11 are type-II AGN including 7 at z>1.5. This distribution
overlaps closely with the X-ray detected radio sources which were also detected
by SCUBA. Stacked 1.4-GHz emission at the positions of radio-faint X-ray
sources is correlated with X-ray hardness. Most extended radio starbursts at
z>1.3 host X-ray selected obscured AGN. Radio emission from most of these
ultra-luminous objects is dominated by star formation but it contributes less
than 1/3 of their X-ray luminosity. Our results support the inferences from
SCUBA and IR data, that at z>1.5, star formation is an order of magnitude more
extended and more copious, it is closely linked to AGN activity and it is
triggered differently, compared with star formation at lower redshifts.
[85]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0703654 [pdf] - 90463
Early Optical Polarization of a Gamma Ray Burst Afterglow
Mundell, Carole G.;
Steele, Iain A.;
Smith, Robert J.;
Kobayashi, Shiho;
Melandri, Andrea;
Guidorzi, Cristiano;
Gomboc, Andreja;
Mottram, Chris J.;
Clarke, David;
Monfardini, Alessandro;
Carter, David;
Bersier, David;
.
Submitted: 2007-03-26
We report the optical polarization of a gamma ray burst (GRB) afterglow,
obtained 203 seconds after the initial burst of gamma rays from GRB 060418,
using a ring polarimeter on the robotic Liverpool Telescope. Our robust
(2-sigma) upper limit on the percentage of polarization, less than 8%,
coincides with the fireball deceleration time at the onset of the afterglow.
The combination of the rate of decay of the optical brightness and the low
polarization at this critical time constrains standard models of GRB ejecta,
ruling out the presence of a large-scale ordered magnetic field in the emitting
region.
[86]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0612021 [pdf] - 87359
Rapid N_H changes in NGC 4151
Submitted: 2006-12-01, last modified: 2007-02-16
We have analyzed the two longest (elapsed time > 3 days) BeppoSAX
observations of the X-ray brightest Seyfert galaxy, NGC 4151, to search for
spectral variability on time-scales from a few tens of ksec to years. We found
in both cases highly significant spectral variability below ~ 6 keV down to the
shortest time-scales investigated. These variations can be naturally explained
in terms of variations in the low energy cut-off due to obscuring matter along
the line of sight. If the cut-off is modeled by two neutral absorption
components, one fully covering the source and the second covering only a
fraction of the source, the shortest time-scale of variability of a few days
constrains the location of the obscuring matter to within 3.4 X 10^4
Schwarzschild radii from the central X-ray source. This is consistent with the
distance of the Broad Emission Line Region, as inferred from reverberation
mapping, and difficult to reconcile with the parsec scale dusty molecular torus
of Krolik & Begelman (1988). We have also explored a more complex absorption
structure, namely the presence of an ionized absorber. Although the behaviour
of the ionization parameter is nicely consistent with the expectations, the
results are not completely satisfactory from the statistical point of view.
The overall absorption during the 2001 December observation is lower than in
all other historical observations with similar 2-10 keV flux. This suggests
that absorption variability plays a crucial role in the observed flux
variability of this source.
[87]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0702115 [pdf] - 89169
Searching for RR Lyrae stars in the Canis Major Overdensity
Submitted: 2007-02-05, last modified: 2007-02-06
The Canis Major overdensity (CMa) was initially proposed to be the remnant of
a tidally disrupting dSph galaxy. Since its nature is still subject of debate,
the goal of the present work was to conduct a large-scale RR Lyrae survey in
CMa, in order to see if there is an overdensity of these stars. The survey
spans a total area of ~34 sq. deg. with observations in V and R filters, made
with the 1.0m Jurgen Stock Schmidt telescope at the National Astronomical
Observatory of Venezuela. Current results in a subregion, including
spectroscopic observations, show that the small number of RR Lyrae stars found
can be accounted for by the halo and thick disk components of our Galaxy.
[88]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0610228 [pdf] - 316571
Supernovae in Low-Redshift Galaxy Clusters: the Type-Ia Supernova Rate
Submitted: 2006-10-08, last modified: 2007-02-05
Supernova (SN) rates are a potentially powerful diagnostic of star formation
history (SFH), metal enrichment, and SN physics, particularly in galaxy
clusters with their deep, metal-retaining potentials, and simple SFH. However,
a low-redshift cluster SN rate has never been published. We derive the SN rate
in galaxy clusters at 0.06<z<0.19, based on type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) that
were discovered by the Wise Observatory Optical Transient Survey. As described
in a separate paper, a sample of 140 rich Abell clusters was monitored, in
which six cluster SNe Ia were found and confirmed spectroscopically. Here, we
determine the SN detection efficiencies of the individual survey images, and
combine the efficiencies with the known spectral properties of SNe Ia to
calculate the effective visibility time of the survey. The cluster stellar
luminosities are measured from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) database in
the griz SDSS bands. Uncertainties are estimated using Monte-Carlo simulations
in which all input parameters are allowed to vary over their known
distributions. We derive SN rates normalized by stellar luminosity, in SNU
units (SNe per century per 10^10 L_sun) in five photometric bandpasses, of
0.36+/-(0.22,0.14)+/-0.02 (B), 0.351+/-(0.210,0.139)+/-0.020 (g),
0.288+/-(0.172,0.114)+/-0.018 (r), 0.229+/-(0.137,0.091)+/-0.014 (i),
0.186+/-(0.111,0.074)+/-0.010 (z), where the quoted errors are statistical and
systematic, respectively. The SN rate per stellar mass unit, derived using a
color-luminosity-mass relation, is 0.098+/-(0.059,0.039)+/-0.009 SNe (century
10^10 M_sun)^-1. The low cluster SN rates we find are similar to, and
consistent with, the SN Ia rate in local elliptical galaxies.
[89]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0701776 [pdf] - 88905
Low-Frequency study of two clusters of galaxies: A2744 and A2219
Submitted: 2007-01-26
Spectral index images can be used to constraint the energy spectrum of
relativistic electrons and magnetic field distribution in radio halos and
relics, providing useful information to understand their formation, evolution
and connection to cluster merger processes. We present low-frequency images of
the two clusters of galaxies: A2744 and A2219, in which a wide diffuse emission
is detected. Observations were made with the Very Large Array at the frequency
of 325 MHz. For both clusters deep Very Large Array 1.4 GHz observations are
available. Combining the 325 MHz and 1.4 GHz data, we obtained the spectral
index images and the brightness radial profiles of the diffuse radio emission
with a resolution of ~ 1'. The azimuthally averaged spectral index in A2744 is
constant to a value close to alpha ~ 1 up to a distance of 1 Mpc from the
cluster center. However, the spectral index image shows the presence of
localized regions in which the radio spectrum is significantly different from
the average. The observed spectral index variations range from a minimum of
alpha ~ 0.7 +/- 0.1 to a maximum alpha ~ 1.5 +/- 0.2. From the comparison of
the spectral index with the X-rays data it is found for the first time that the
flat spectrum regions of the radio halo tend to have higher temperature. In the
case of A2219, the radio emission in the central regions of the cluster is
dominated by the blend of discrete sources. The azimuthally averaged radio
spectrum is alpha ~ 0.8 in the central region of the cluster and is close to a
value of alpha ~ 1 in the radio halo. The limited sensitivity of the 325 MHz
image does not allowed us to detect all the radio halo structure seen at 1.4
GHz and therefore no constrains on the point-to-point variations of the
spectral index have been obtained for this cluster.
[90]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0612119 [pdf] - 87457
Stellar populations of massive elliptical galaxies in very rich clusters
Submitted: 2006-12-05
We present a detailed stellar population analysis of 27 massive elliptical
galaxies within 4 very rich clusters at redshift z~0.2: A115, A655, A963 and
A2111. Using the new, high-resolution stellar populations models developed in
our group, we obtained accurate estimates of the mean luminosity-weighted ages
and relative abundances of CN, Mg and Fe. We have found that [CN/H] and [Mg/H]
are correlated with sigma while [Fe/H] and Log(age) are not. In addition, both
abundance ratios [CN/Fe] and [Mg/Fe] increase with sigma. Furthermore, the
[CN/H]-sigma and [CN/Fe]-sigma slopes are steeper for galaxies in very rich
clusters than those in the less dense Virgo and Coma clusters. On the other
hand, [Mg/H]-sigma and [Mg/Fe]-sigma slopes keep constant as functions of the
environment. Our results are compatible with a scenario in which the stellar
populations of massive elliptical galaxies, independently of their environment
and mass, had formation timescales shorter than ~1 Gyr. This result implies
that massive elliptical galaxies have evolved passively since, at least, as
long ago as z~2. For a given galaxy mass the duration of star formation is
shorter in those galaxies belonging to more dense environments; whereas the
mass-metallicity relation appears to be also a function of the cluster
properties: the denser the environment is, the steeper are the correlations.
Finally, we show that the abundance ratios [CN/Fe] and [Mg/Fe] are the key
"chemical clocks" to infer the star formation history timescales in
ellipticals. In particular, [Mg/Fe] provides an upper limit for those formation
timescales, while [CN/Fe] apperars to be the most suitable parameter to resolve
them in elliptical galaxies with sigma<300 km/s.
[91]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0611456 [pdf] - 86842
Principal Component Analysis as a tool to explore star formation
histories
Submitted: 2006-11-14
Principal Component Analysis (PCA) is a well-known multivariate technique
used to decorrelate a set of vectors. PCA has been extensively applied in the
past to the classification of stellar and galaxy spectra. Here we apply PCA to
the optical spectra of early-type galaxies, with the aim of extracting
information about their star formation history. We consider two different data
sets: 1) a reduced sample of 30 elliptical galaxies in Hickson compact groups
and in the field, and 2) a large volume-limited (z<0.1) sample of ~7,000
galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Even though these data sets are
very different, the homogeneity of the populations results in a very similar
set of principal components. Furthermore, most of the information (in the sense
of variance) is stored into the first few components in both samples. The first
component (PC1) can be interpreted as an old population and carries over 99% of
the variance. The second component (PC2) is related to young stars and we find
a correlation with NUV flux from GALEX. Model fits consistently give younger
ages for those galaxies with higher values of PC2.
[92]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0610815 [pdf] - 554650
Uncovering the chemical enrichment and mass-assembly histories of
star-forming galaxies
Submitted: 2006-10-27
We explore the mass-assembly and chemical enrichment histories of star
forming galaxies by applying a population synthesis method to a sample of 84828
galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 5. Our method
decomposes the entire observed spectrum in terms of a sum of simple stellar
populations spanning a wide range of ages and metallicities, thus allowing the
reconstruction of galaxy histories. A comparative study of galaxy evolution is
presented, where galaxies are grouped onto bins of nebular abundances or mass.
We find that galaxies whose warm interstellar medium is poor in heavy elements
are slow in forming stars. Their stellar metallicities also rise slowly with
time, reaching their current values ($Z_\star \sim 1/3 Z_\odot$) in the last
$\sim 100$ Myr of evolution. Systems with metal rich nebulae, on the other
hand, assembled most of their mass and completed their chemical evolution long
ago, reaching $Z_\star \sim Z_\odot$ already at lookback times of several Gyr.
These same trends, which are ultimately a consequence of galaxy downsizing,
appear when galaxies are grouped according to their stellar mass. The
reconstruction of galaxy histories to this level of detail out of integrated
spectra offers promising prospects in the field of galaxy evolution theories.
[93]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0610711 [pdf] - 86135
Galaxy and AGN Evolution in the MIR: a combined Spitzer and X-ray view
Submitted: 2006-10-24
A proper analysis of the evolution of sources emitting in the Mid-Infrared is
strongly dependent on their broad-band spectral properties (SEDs) at different
redshifts and luminosities and on a reliable classification allowing to
disentangle AGN from star-formation activity. The diagnostic diagrams based on
the optical line ratios are often ambiguous and/or misleading not allowing a
proper separation of the galaxy/AGN populations. Thanks to the combination of
deep Spitzer and X-rays data a much better census of the hidden AGN activity
and dust-obscured star-forming galaxies can be obtained, constraining galaxy
and AGN evolutionary models.
[94]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0610569 [pdf] - 85993
Absolute diffuse calibration of IRAC through mid-infrared and radio
study of HII regions
Cohen, Martin;
Green, Anne J.;
Meade, Marilyn R.;
Babler, Brian;
Indebetouw, Remy;
Whitney, Barbara A.;
Watson, Christer;
Wolfire, Mark;
Wolff, Mike J.;
Mathis, John S.;
Churchwell, Edward B.;
.
Submitted: 2006-10-19
We investigate the diffuse absolute calibration of the InfraRed Array Camera
on the Spitzer Space Telescope at 8.0microns using a sample of 43 HII regions
with a wide range of morphologies near GLON=312deg. For each region we
carefully measure sky-subtracted,point-source- subtracted, areally-integrated
IRAC 8.0-micron fluxes and compare these with Midcourse Space eXperiment (MSX)
8.3-micron images at two different spatial resolutions, and with radio
continuum maps. We determine an accurate median ratio of IRAC
8.0-micron/MSX\8.3-micron fluxes, of 1.55+/-0.15. From robust spectral energy
distributions of these regions we conclude that the present 8.0-micron diffuse
calibration of the SST is 36% too high compared with the MSX validated
calibration, perhaps due to scattered light inside the camera. This is an
independent confirmation of the result derived for the diffuse calibration of
IRAC by the Spitzer Science Center (SSC).
From regression analyses we find that 843-MHz radio fluxes of HII regions and
mid-infrared (MIR) fluxes are linearly related for MSX at 8.3-microns and
Spitzer at 8.0 microns, confirming the earlier MSX result by Cohen & Green. The
median ratio of MIR/843-MHz diffuse continuum fluxes is 600 times smaller in
nonthermal than thermal regions, making it a sharp discriminant. The ratios are
largely independent of morphology up to a size of ~24 arcsec. We provide
homogeneous radio and MIR morphologies for all sources. MIR morphology is not
uniquely related to radio structure. Compact regions may have MIR filaments
and/or diffuse haloes, perhaps infrared counter- parts to weakly ionized radio
haloes found around compact HII regions. We offer two IRAC colour-colour plots
as quantitative diagnostics of diffuse HII regions.
[95]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0609092 [pdf] - 84684
Observational Limits on X-ray Bursts from RRAT J1911+00
Submitted: 2006-09-04
(abridged) The high radio-flux brightness temperature of the recently
discovered class of sources known as Rotating RAdio Transients (RRATs)
motivates detailed study in the X-ray band. We describe analyses of historical
X-ray data, searching for X-ray phenomena (sources, behaviors), finding no
sources or behaviors which may unequivocally be associated with RRAT J1911+00.
We put forward a candidate X-ray counterpart to RRAT J1911+00, discovered in a
Chandra observation in Feb 2001, which fades by a factor >5 prior to April
2004. The X-ray flux and optical (F_X/F_R>12) and near infra-red (F_X/F_J>35)
limits, as well as the X-ray flux itself, are consistent with an AGN origin,
unrelated to RRAT J1911+00. Searches for msec X-ray bursts found no evidence
for such a signal, and we place the first observational upper-limit on the
X-ray to radio flux ratio of RRAT bursts: F_X/F_{radio} <6e-11 ergs cm-2 s-1
mJy-1. The upper-limit on the X-ray burst flux (corresponding to <2.2e37 (d/3.3
kpc)^2 erg s-1, 2-10 keV) requires a limit on the spectral energy density
power-law slope of \alpha<-0.3 between the radio and X-ray bands. We place a
limit on the time-average X-ray burst luminosity, associated with radio bursts,
of < 3.4e30 (d/3.3 kpc)^2 erg s-1.
[96]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0608545 [pdf] - 84422
Comparing dynamical and photometric-stellar masses of early-type
galaxies at z ~ 1
Rettura, A.;
Rosati, P.;
Strazzullo, V.;
Dickinson, M.;
Fosbury, R. A. E.;
Rocca-Volmerange, B.;
Cimatti, A.;
Alighieri, S. di Serego;
Kuntschner, H.;
Lanzoni, B.;
Nonino, M.;
Popesso, P.;
Stern, D.;
Eisenhardt, P. R.;
Lidman, C.;
Stanford, S. A.;
.
Submitted: 2006-08-25
The purpose of this study is to explore the relationship between galaxy
stellar masses, based on multiwavelength photometry spectral template fitting
and dynamical masses based on published velocity dispersion measurements, for a
sample of 48 early-type galaxies at z ~ 1 with HST/ACS morphological
information. We determine photometric-stellar masses and perform a quantitative
morphological analysis of cluster and field galaxies at redshift 0.6 < z < 1.2,
using ground- and space-based multiwavelegth data available on the GOODS-S
field and on the field around the X-ray luminous cluster RDCS1252.9-2927 at z =
1.24. We use multi-band photometry over 0.4-8um from HST/ACS, VLT/ISAAC and
Spitzer/IRAC to estimate photometric-stellar masses using Composite Stellar
Population (CSP) templates computed with PEGASE.2 models. We compare stellar
masses with those obtained using CSPs built with Bruzual & Charlot and Maraston
models. We then compare photometric-stellar mass and dynamical mass estimates
as a function of morphological parameters obtained from HST/ACS imaging. Based
on our sample, which spans the mass range log(Mphot)=[10, 11.5], we find that
1) PEGASE.2, BC03, M05 yield consistent photometric-stellar masses for
early-type galaxies at z ~ 1 with a small scatter (0.15 dex rms); 2) adopting a
Kroupa IMF, photometric-stellar masses match dynamical mass estimates for
early-type galaxies with an average offset of 0.27 dex; 3) assuming a costant
IMF, increasing dark matter fraction with the increasing galaxy mass can
explain the observed trend.
[97]
oai:arXiv.org:nucl-th/0607034 [pdf] - 118790
$^1S_0$ superfluid phase--transition in neutron matter with realistic
nuclear potentials and modern many--body theories
Submitted: 2006-07-17
The $^1S_0$ pairing in neutron matter has been investigated in presence of
realistic two-- and three--nucleon interactions. We have adopted the Argonne
$v_{8^\prime}$ NN and the Urbana IX 3N potentials. Quantum Monte Carlo theory,
specifically the Auxiliary Field Diffusion Monte Carlo method, and Correlated
Basis Function theory are employed in order to get quantitative and reliable
estimates of the gap. They both fully take into account the medium
modifications due to the interaction induced correlations. The two methods are
in good agreement up to the maximum gap density and both point to a slight
reduction with respect to the standard BCS value. In fact, the maximum gap is
about $2.5 \text{MeV}$ at $k_F \sim 0.8 \text{fm}^{-1}$ in BCS and 2.3--$2.4
\text{MeV}$ at $k_F \sim 0.6 \text{fm}^{-1}$ in correlated matter. At higher
densities the Quantum Monte Carlo gap becomes close to BCS. In general, the
computed medium polarization effects are much smaller than those previously
estimated within \emph{all theories}. Truncations of Argonne $v_{8^\prime}$ to
simpler forms give the same gaps in BCS, provided the truncated potentials have
been refitted to the same NN data set. Differences among the models appear in
the correlated theories, most of the reduction being attributable to the tensor
force. The three--nucleon interaction provides an additional increase of the
gap of about 0.35 MeV.
[98]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0605448 [pdf] - 82135
Optical spectroscopy of BL Lacertae objects. Broad lines, companion
galaxies and redshift lower limits
Submitted: 2006-05-18
Aims: We present optical spectroscopy of a sample of BL Lac objects, to
determine their redshift, to study their broad emission line properties and to
characterize their close environment. Methods: Twelve objects were observed
using the ESO 3.6m and the NOT 2.5m telescopes, obtaining spectra for the BL
Lacs and for nearby sources. Results: For seven objects, nuclear emission lines
and/or absorption lines from the host galaxy were detected. In all the four
cases where absorption lines were revealed, the host galaxy has been resolved
with HST or ground-based imaging. The broad H_alpha luminosities (or their
upper limits) of the BL Lacs are similar to those of radio-loud quasars. For
two BL Lacs, spectroscopy of close companions indicates that they are at the
redshift of the BL Lacs, and therefore physically associated and likely
interacting. Five BL Lacs have a featureless spectrum. In these cases, we apply
a new technique to derive lower limits for their redshift. which are consistent
with lower limits deduced from imaging.
[99]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0605185 [pdf] - 81873
IR-source IRAS20508+2011: spectral variability of the central star
Submitted: 2006-05-06
Over the five years of high-resolution spectroscopy of the cool star
identified with the IR source IRAS20508+2011, the photospheric radial velocity
variability Vr=15-30km/s is detected. In the same time, the Halpha profile
varied from an intense bell-shaped emission line with a small absorption to
2-peaked emission with a central absorption feature below the continuum level.
The NaD doublet lines shown a complex profile with broad (FWHM \approx 120km/s)
emission and photospheric absorption, as well as an interstellar component. We
used model atmospheres to determine the physical parameters and chemical
composition of the star's atmosphere: Te=4800K, log g=1.5, [Fe/H]=-0.36, [O/Fe]
=+1.79 (with the ratio [C/O]=-0.9). The totality of the parameters suggests
that the optical component of IRAS20508+2011 is an O-rich AGB star with
luminosity Mv
[100]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0605119 [pdf] - 81807
Absolute motions of globular clusters. II. [HST astrometry and VLT
radial velocities in NGC6397]
Submitted: 2006-05-04
In this paper we present a new, accurate determination of the three
components of the absolute space velocity of the Galactic globular cluster
NGC6397 (l 338d, b -12d). We used three HST/WFPC2 fields with multi-epoch
observations to obtain astrometric measurements of objects in three different
fields in this cluster. The identification of 33 background galaxies with sharp
nuclei allowed us to determine an absolute reference point and measure the
absolute proper motion of the cluster. The third component has been obtained
from radial velocities measured on spectra from the multi-fiber spectrograph
FLAMES at UT2-VLT. We find [mu_alpha cos(delta), mu_delta](J2000.0) = [+3.39
+/- 0.15, -17.55 +/- 0.15] mas/yr, and V_rad = +18.36 +/- 0.09 (+/-0.10) km/s.
Assuming a Galactic potential, we calculate the cluster orbit for various
assumed distances, and briefly discuss the implications.
[101]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0605131 [pdf] - 81819
Galaxy pairs in cosmological simulations: effects of interactions on
colours and chemical abundances
Submitted: 2006-05-04
We perform an statistical analysis of galaxies in pairs in a Lambda-CDM
scenario by using the chemical GADGET-2 of Scannapieco et al. (2005) in order
to study the effects of galaxy interactions on colours and metallicities. We
find that galaxy-galaxy interactions can produce a bimodal colour distribution
with galaxies with significant recent star formation activity contributing
mainly to blue colours. In the simulations, the colours and the fractions of
recently formed stars of galaxies in pairs depend on environment more strongly
than those of galaxies without a close companion, suggesting that interactions
play an important role in galaxy evolution. If the metallicity of the stellar
populations is used as the chemical indicator, we find that the simulated
galaxies determine luminosity-metallicity and stellar mass-metallicity
relations which do not depend on the presence of a close companion. However, in
the case of the luminosity-metallicity relation, at a given level of
enrichment, we detect a systematic displacement of the relation to brighter
magnitudes for active star forming systems. Regardless of relative distance and
current level of star formation activity, galaxies in pairs have stellar
populations with higher level of enrichment than galaxies without a close
companion. In the case of the gas component, this is no longer valid for
galaxies in pairs with passive star formation which only show an excess of
metals for very close pair members, consequence of an important recent past
star formation activity. (Abridged).
[102]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0604541 [pdf] - 81610
Ground-Based CCD Astrometry with Wide Field Imagers. I. [Observations
just a few years apart allow decontamination of field objects from members in
two Globular clusters.]
Submitted: 2006-04-26
This paper is the first of a series of papers in which we will apply the
methods we have developed for high-precision astrometry (and photometry) with
the Hubble Space Telescope to the case of wide-field ground-based images. In
particular, we adapt the software originally developed for WFPC2 to
ground-based, wide field images from the WFI at the ESO 2.2m telescope. In this
paper, we describe in details the new software, we characterize the WFI
geometric distortion, discuss the adopted local transformation approach for
proper-motion measurements, and apply the new technique to two-epoch archive
data of the two closest Galactic globular clusters: NGC 6121 (M4) and NGC 6397.
The results of this exercise are more than encouraging. We find that we can
achieve a precision of ~7 mas (in each coordinate) in a single exposure for a
well-exposed star, which allows a very good cluster-field separation in both
M4, and NGC 6397, with a temporal baseline of only 2.8, and 3.1 years,
respectively.
[103]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0604467 [pdf] - 81536
Global Dynamics in Galactic Triaxial Systems I
Submitted: 2006-04-21
In this paper we present a theoretical analysis of the global dynamics in a
triaxial galactic system using a 3D integrable Hamiltonian as a simple
representation. We include a thorough discussion on the effect of adding a
generic non--integrable perturbation to the global dynamics of the system. We
adopt the triaxial Stackel Hamiltonian as the integrable model and compute its
resonance structure in order to understand its global dynamics when a
perturbation is introduced. Also do we take profit of this example in order to
provide a theoretical discussion about diffussive processes taking place in
phase space.
[104]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0602475 [pdf] - 80051
Relativistic MHD Winds from Rotating Neutron Stars
Submitted: 2006-02-21
We solve for the time-dependent dynamics of axisymmetric, general
relativistic magnetohydrodynamic winds from rotating neutron stars. The mass
loss rate is obtained self-consistently as a solution to the MHD equations,
subject to a finite thermal pressure at the stellar surface. We consider both
monopole and dipole magnetic field geometries and we explore the parameter
regime extending from low magnetization (low-sigma_o), almost thermally-driven
winds to high magnetization (high-sigma_o), relativistic Poynting-flux
dominated outflows. We compute the angular momentum and rotational energy loss
rates as a function of sigma_o and compare with analytic expectations from the
classical theory of pulsars and magnetized stellar winds. In the case of the
monopole, our high-sigma_o calculations asymptotically approach the analytic
force-free limit. If we define the spindown rate in terms of the open magnetic
flux, we similarly reproduce the spindown rate from recent force-free
calculations of the aligned dipole. However, even for sigma_o as high as ~20,
we find that the location of the Y-type point (r_Y), which specifies the radius
of the last closed field line in the equatorial plane, is not the radius of the
light cylinder R_L = c/omega (R = cylindrical radius), as has previously been
assumed in most estimates and force-free calculations. Instead, although the
Alfven radius at intermediate latitudes quickly approaches R_L as sigma_o
exceeds unity, r_Y remains significantly less than R_L. Because r_Y < R_L, our
calculated spindown rates thus exceed the classic ``vacuum dipole'' rate. We
discussthe implications of our results for models of rotation-powered pulsars
and magnetars, both in their observed states and in their hypothesized rapidly
rotating initial state.
[105]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0510641 [pdf] - 77137
COSMOGRAIL: the COSmological MOnitoring of GRAvItational Lenses II. SDSS
J0924+0219: the redshift of the lensing galaxy, the quasar spectral
variability and the Einstein rings
Submitted: 2005-10-21, last modified: 2006-02-20
(Abridged) We present our VLT/FORS1 deep spectroscopic observations of the
gravitationally lensed quasar SDSS J0924+0219, as well as archival HST/NICMOS
and ACS images of the same object. The two-epoch spectra, obtained in the Multi
Object Spectroscopy (MOS) mode, allow for very accurate flux calibration,
spatial deconvolution of the data, and provide the redshift of the lensing
galaxy z=0.394 +/- 0.001. These spectra, taken 15 days apart, show only slight
continuum variations, while the broad emission lines display obvious changes in
the red wing of the Mg II line, in the Fe II bands, and in the central part of
the C III] line. Even though variations in the line profiles are present, we do
not see any significant differences between the continuum and emission line
flux ratios of images A and B of the quasar. Spatial deconvolution of the HST
images reveals a double Einstein ring. One ring corresponds to the lensed
quasar host galaxy at z=1.524 and a second bluer one, is the image either of a
star-forming region in the host galaxy, or of another unrelated lower redshift
object. We find that a broad range of lens models gives a satisfactory fit to
the data. However, they predict very different time delays, making SDSS
J0924+0219 an object of particular interest for photometric monitoring. In
addition, the lens models reconstructed using exclusively the constraints from
the Einstein rings, or using exclusively the astrometry of the quasar images,
are not compatible. This suggests that substructures play an important role in
SDSS J0924+0219.
[106]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0602162 [pdf] - 79738
Jet Speeds in Wide Angle Tailed Radio Galaxies
Submitted: 2006-02-07
We present a sample of 30 wide angle tailed radio galaxies (WATs) that we use
to constrain the jet speeds in these sources. We measure the distribution of
jet-sidedness ratios for the sample, and assuming that the jets are beamed, jet
speeds in the range (0.3-0.7)c are obtained. Whilst the core prominence of the
sample, which ought to be a reliable indicator of beaming, shows little
correlation with the jet-sidedness, we argue that due to the peculiar nature of
WATs core-prominence is unlikely to be a good indicator of beaming in these
sources. We further show that if the jets are fast and light, then the galaxy
speeds required to bend jets into C-shapes such as those seen in 0647+693 are
reasonable for a galaxy in a merging or recently merged cluster.
[107]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0511026 [pdf] - 77384
COSMOGRAIL: the COSmological MOnitoring of GRAvItational Lenses III.
Redshift of the lensing galaxy in eight gravitationally lensed quasars
Submitted: 2005-11-01, last modified: 2006-01-09
Aims: We measure the redshift of the lensing galaxy in eight gravitationally
lensed quasars in view of determining the Hubble parameter H_0 from the time
delay method.
Methods: Deep VLT/FORS1 spectra of lensed quasars are spatially deconvolved
in order to separate the spectrum of the lensing galaxies from the glare of the
much brighter quasar images. A new observing strategy is devised. It involves
observations in Multi-Object-Spectroscopy (MOS) which allows the simultaneous
observation of the target and of several PSF and flux calibration stars. The
advantage of this method over traditional long-slit observations is a much more
reliable extraction and flux calibration of the spectra.
Results: For the first time we measure the redshift of the lensing galaxy in
three multiply-imaged quasars: SDSS J1138+0314 (z=0.445), SDSS J1226-0006
(z=0.517), SDSS J1335+0118 (z=0.440), and we give a tentative estimate of the
redshift of the lensing galaxy in Q 1355-2257 (z=0.701). We confirm four
previously measured redshifts: HE 0047-1756 (z=0.407), HE 0230-2130 (z=0.523),
HE 0435-1223 (z=0.454) and WFI J2033-4723 (z=0.661). In addition, we determine
the redshift of the second lensing galaxy in HE 0230-2130 (z=0.526). The
spectra of all lens galaxies are typical for early-type galaxies, except for
the second lensing galaxy in HE 0230-2130 which displays prominent [OII]
emission.
[108]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0512537 [pdf] - 78737
The double AGN in NGC 6240 revealed through 3-5 micron spectroscopy
Submitted: 2005-12-21
We present 3-5 micron spectroscopy of the interacting system NGC 6240,
showing the presence of two active galactic nuclei. The brightest (southern)
nucleus shows up with a starburst-like emission, with a prominent 3.3 micron
emission feature. However, the presence of an AGN is revealed by the detection
of a broad Br alpha emission line, with a width of ~1,800 km/s. The spectrum of
the faintest (northern) nucleus shows typical AGN features, such as a steep
continuum and broad absorption features in the M-band. We discuss the physical
properties of the dusty absorbers/emitters, and show that in both nuclei the
AGN is dominant in the 3-5 micron band, but its contribution to the total
luminosity is small (a few percent of the starburst emission).
[109]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0511574 [pdf] - 77932
Metallicity and colours in galaxy pairs in chemical hydrodynamical
simulations
Submitted: 2005-11-18
Using chemical hydrodynamical simulations consistent with a Lambda-CDM model,
we study the role played by mergers and interactions in the regulation of the
star formation activity, colours and the chemical properties of galaxies in
pairs. A statistical analysis of the orbital parameters in galaxy pairs (r <100
kpc/h) shows that the star formation (SF) activity correlates strongly with the
relative separation and weakly with the relative velocity, indicating that
close encounters (r <30 kpc/h) can increase the SF activity to levels higher
than that exhibit in galaxies without a close companion. Analysing the internal
properties of interacting systems, we find that their stability properties also
play a role in the regulation the SF activity (Perez et al 2005a).
Particularly, we find that the passive star forming galaxies in pairs are
statistically more stable with deeper potential wells and less leftover gas
than active star forming pairs. In order to compare our results with
observations, we also build a projected catalog of galaxy pairs (2D-GP: rp <100
kpc/h and Vr <350 km/s), constructed by projecting the 3D sample in different
random directions. In good agreement with observations (Lambas et al 2003), our
results indicate that galaxies with rp < 25 kpc/h (close pairs) show an
enhancement of the SF activity with respect to galaxies without a close
companion. (Abridged.)
[110]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0510370 [pdf] - 76866
Globular clusters, satellite galaxies and stellar haloes from early dark
matter peaks
Submitted: 2005-10-12
The Milky Way contains several distinct old stellar components that provide a
fossil record of its formation. We can understand their spatial distribution
and kinematics in a hierarchical formation scenario by associating the
proto-galactic fragments envisaged by Searle and Zinn (1978) with the rare
peaks able to cool gas in the cold dark matter density field collapsing at
redshift z>10. We use hierarchical structure formation simulations to explore
the kinematics and spatial distribution of these early star-forming structures
in galaxy haloes today. Most of the proto-galaxies rapidly merge, their stellar
contents and dark matter becoming smoothly distributed and forming the inner
Galactic halo. The metal-poor globular clusters and old halo stars become
tracers of this early evolutionary phase, centrally biased and naturally
reproducing the observed steep fall off with radius. The most outlying peaks
fall in late and survive to the present day as satellite galaxies. The observed
radial velocity dispersion profile and the local radial velocity anisotropy of
Milky Way halo stars are successfully reproduced in this model. If this epoch
of structure formation coincides with a suppression of further cooling into
lower sigma peaks then we can reproduce the rarity, kinematics and spatial
distribution of satellite galaxies as suggested by Bullock et al. (2000).
Reionisation at z=12+/-2 provides a natural solution to the missing satellites
problem. Measuring the distribution of globular clusters and halo light on
scales from galaxies to clusters could be used to constrain global versus local
reionisation models. If reionisation occurs contemporary, our model predicts a
constant frequency of blue globulars relative to the host halo mass, except for
dwarf galaxies where the average relative frequencies become smaller.
[111]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0509591 [pdf] - 76172
The Mass Spectra of Cores in Turbulent Molecular Clouds and Implications
for the Initial Mass Function
Submitted: 2005-09-20
We investigate the core mass distribution (CMD) resulting from numerical
models of turbulent fragmentation of molecular clouds. In particular we study
its dependence on the sonic root-mean-square Mach number $\Ms$. We analyze
simulations with $\Ms$ ranging from 1 to 15 to show that, as $\Ms$ increases,
the number of cores increases as well while their average mass decreases. This
stems from the fact that high-Mach number flows produce many and strong shocks
on intermediate to small spatial scales, leading to a highly-fragmented density
structure. We also show that the CMD from purely turbulent fragmentation does
not follow a single power-law, but it may be described by a function that
changes continuously its shape, probably more similar to a log-normal function.
The CMD in supersonic turbulent flows does not have a universal slope, and as
consequence, cast some doubt on attempts to directly relate the CMD to a
universal Initial Mass Function.
[112]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0509407 [pdf] - 75989
Exploring the Potential of Integral Field Spectroscopy Observing
Extrasolar Planet Transits: Ground Based Observations of the Atmospheric Na
in HD209458b
Submitted: 2005-09-14
We explore the use of Integral Field Spectroscopy (IFS) to observe extrasolar
planet transits. Although this technique should find its full potential in
space observations (e.g. JWST, TPF), we have tested its basics with ground
based time series observations of HD209458b obtained with WHT+INTEGRAL during a
transit. For this analysis we used 5550 spectra, obtained in 150 exposures
during a period of >7 hours. We found that IFS offers 3 fundamental advantages
with respect to previously used methods. (i) It improves the effective S/N in
photon limited observations by distributing the light coming from the star into
the 2 dimensions of the detector. (ii) This type of IFS data allows to
'auto-calibrate' instrumental and background effects. (iii) Since the star
image characteristics as well as its photometric properties are extracted from
the same data-cube, it is possible to decorrelate photometric instabilities
induced by PSF variations. These data have also allowed us to explore the
accuracy limits of ground based 'relative' spectrophotometry. This was done
using a photometric index that probes the NaD lines, for which we obtained a
nominal 1-sigma error of ~1.0x10^-4. This result, based on observations of only
1 transit, indicates that this type of ground observation can constrain the
characterization of the transmission spectrum of extrasolar planets. The
present observations are compatible with no extra NaD depression during the
transit. Though this result seems to be inconsistent with the recently reported
HST-STIS findings we point out its limited statistical meaning: the results
disagree within 1-sigma, but agree within 2-sigma. We also give some
recommenda-tions to instrument developers in order to enhance the efficiency of
the method.
[113]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0509334 [pdf] - 75916
Confronting Hierarchical Clustering Models with Observations of Galaxy
Pairs
Submitted: 2005-09-13
We investigate the star formation activity in galaxy pairs in chemical
hydrodynamical simulations consistent with a Lambda-CDM scenario. A statistical
analysis of the effects of galaxy interactions on the star formation activity
as a function of orbital parameters shows that close encounters (r < 30 kpc/h)
can be effectively correlated with an enhancement of star formation activity
with respect to galaxies without a close companion. Our results suggest that
the stability properties of systems are also relevant in this process. We found
that the passive star forming galaxies pairs tend to have deeper potential
wells, older stellar populations, and less leftover gas than active star
forming ones. In order to assess the effects that projection and interlopers
could introduce in observational samples, we have also constructed and analysed
projected simulated catalogs of galaxy pairs. In good agreement with
observations, our results show a threshold (rp < 25 kpc/h) for interactions to
enhance the star formation activity with respect to galaxies without a close
companion. Finally, analysing the environmental effect, we detect the expected
SFR-local density relation for both pairs and isolated galaxy samples, although
the density dependence is stronger for galaxies in pairs suggesting a relevant
role for interactions in driving this relation.
[114]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0508577 [pdf] - 75466
Binarity, activity and metallicity among late-type stars I. Methodology
and application to HD 27536 and HD 216803
Submitted: 2005-08-26
We present the first in a series of papers that attempt to investigate the
relation between binarity, magnetic activity, and chemical surface abundances
of cool stars. In the current paper, we lay out and test two abundance analysis
methods and apply them to two well-known, active, single stars, HD 27536
(G8IV-III) and HD 216803 (K5V), presenting photospheric fundamental parameters
and abundances of Li, Al, Ca, Si, Sc, Ti, V, Cr, Fe, Co and Ni. The abundances
from the two methods agree within the errors for all elements except calcium in
\hdeen, which means that either method yields the same fundamental model
parameters and the same abundances. Activity is described by the radiative loss
in the Ca II H & K lines with respect to the bolometric luminosity, through the
activity index R_{HK}. Binarity is established by very precise radial velocity
(RV) measurements using HARPS spectra. The spectral line bisectors are examined
for correlations between RV and bisector shape to distinguish between the
effects of stellar activity and unseen companions. We show that HD 27536
exhibit RV variations mimicking the effect of a low-mass (m ~ 4M_J) companion
in a relatively close (a ~ 1AU) orbit. The variation is strongly correlated
with the activity, and consistent with the known photometric period P = 306.9
d, demonstrating a remarkable coherence between R_{HK} and the bisector shape,
i.e. between the photosphere and the chromosphere. We discuss the complications
involved in distinguishing between companion and activity induced RV
variations.
[115]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0504127 [pdf] - 72224
Evolution of field early-type galaxies: The view from GOODS/CDFS
Submitted: 2005-04-05, last modified: 2005-08-18
(Abridged) We explore the evolution of field early-type galaxies on a sample
extracted from GOODS/CDFS. The galaxies are selected by means of a
non-parametric analysis followed by visual inspection. We exclude those
galaxies which are not consistent with an evolution into the Kormendy relation.
The final set comprises 249 galaxies with a median redshift z=0.7. The
distribution of number counts versus apparent magnitude suggests a substantial
decrease of the comoving number density with redshift. The majority of the
galaxies feature passively evolving old stellar populations. One third of those
in the upper half of the redshift distribution have blue colors, in contrast to
only 10% in the lower redshift subsample. An adaptive binning of the color maps
is performed to explore the internal color distribution. We find that most blue
galaxies in our sample feature blue cores whereas most of the red early-types
are passively evolving stellar populations with red cores. The color gradients
and scatter do not evolve with redshift and are compatible with the
observations at z=0 assuming a radial dependence of the metallicity within each
galaxy. This work emphasizes the need for a careful sample selection, as we
found that most of those galaxies which were visually classified as early types
-- but then rejected based on the Kormendy relation -- feature blue colors
characteristic of recent star formation.
[116]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0508357 [pdf] - 75246
A submm survey of Lyman-alpha haloes in the SA22 protocluster at z=3.1
Geach, J. E.;
Matsuda, Y.;
Smail, Ian;
Chapman, S. C.;
Yamada, T.;
Ivison, R. J.;
Hayashino, T.;
Ohta, K.;
Shioya, Y.;
Taniguchi, Y.;
.
Submitted: 2005-08-16
We present the results from a submm survey of a sample of 23 giant Lya
emitting nebulae in the overdensity at z=3.09 in the SA22 field. These objects,
which have become known as Lya Blobs (LABs) have a diverse range of morphology
and surface brightness, but the nature of their power source is unclear - with
cooling flows and/or AGN/starburst ionised winds being possibilities. Using the
SCUBA submm camera we measure the 850um flux of a sample of LABs, detecting
four LABs at >3.5sigma individually, and a modest statistical detection of the
full sample at about 3mJy. These fluxes correspond to bolometric luminosities
in the ultraluminous regime, with star-formation rates of about 1e3 Msun/yr. We
show there is a trend between Lya luminosity and bolometric output, which
suggests that a galactic scale superwind generated from starbursts of age
10-100Myr may be responsible for the Lya emission. We estimate the
star-formation rate density in SA22 to be >3 Msun/yr/Mpc^3 - greater than the
field at this epoch, and note that there are now 7 submm galaxies in the SA22
structure, making this region the richest association of these intensely active
galaxies. Finally we suggest that Lya haloes may be a common feature of the
submm population in general, and have an important role in the heating and
enrichment of the intergalactic medium.
[117]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0508204 [pdf] - 75093
The kinetic temperature of a molecular cloud at redshift 0.7: Ammonia in
the gravitational lens B0218+357
Submitted: 2005-08-09
Using the Effelsberg 100-m telescope, absorption in the (J,K) = (1,1), (2,2)
and (3,3) inversion lines of ammonia (NH_3) was detected at a redshift of z =
0.6847 toward the gravitational lens system B0218+357. The lambda ~ 2cm
absorption peaks at 0.5-1.0 % of the continuum level and appears to cover a
smaller fraction of the radio continuum background than lines at millimeter
wavelengths. Measured intensities are consistent with a rotation temperature of
~35K, corresponding to a kinetic temperature of ~55K. The column density toward
the core of image A then becomes N(NH_3) ~ 1 * 10^(14)cm^(-2) and fractional
abundance and gas density are of order X(NH_3)~10^(-8) and n(H_2)~5 *
10^(3)cm^(-3), respectively. Upper limits are reported for the (2,1) and (4,4)
lines of NH_3 and for transitions of the SO, DCN, OCS, SiO, C_3N, H_2CO, SiC_2,
HC_3N, HC_5N, and CH_3OH molecules. These limits and the kinetic temperature
indicate that the absorption lines are not arising from a cold dark cloud but
from a warm, diffuse, predominantly molecular medium. The physical parameters
of the absorbing molecular complex, seen at a projected distance of ~2 kpc to
the center of the lensing galaxy, are quite peculiar when compared with the
properties of clouds in the Galaxy or in nearby extragalactic systems.
[118]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0504305 [pdf] - 72402
Cosmological Three-Point Function: Testing The Halo Model Against
Simulations
Submitted: 2005-04-13, last modified: 2005-06-28
We perform detailed comparison of the semi-analytic halo model predictions
with measurements in numerical simulations of the two and three point
correlation functions (3PCF), as well as power spectrum and bispectrum. We
discuss the accuracy and self-consistency of the halo model description of
gravitational clustering in the non-linear regime and constrain halo model
parameters. We exploit the recently proposed multipole expansion of three point
statistics that expresses rotation invariance in the most natural way. This not
only offers technical advantages by reducing the integrals required for the
halo model predictions, but amounts to a convenient way of compressing the
information contained in the 3PCF. We find that, with an appropriate choice of
the halo boundary and mass function cut-off, halo model predictions are in good
agreement with the bispectrum measured in numerical simulations. However, the
halo model predicts less than the observed configuration dependence of the 3PCF
on ~ Mpc scales. This effect is mainly due to quadrupole moment deficit,
possibly related to the assumption of spherical halo geometry. Our analysis
shows that using its harmonic decomposition, the full configuration dependence
of the 3PCF in the non-linear regime can be compressed into just a few numbers,
the lowest multipoles. Moreover, these multipoles are closely related to the
highest signal to noise eigenmodes of the 3PCF. Therefore this estimator may
simplify future analyses aimed at constraining cosmological and halo model
parameters from observational data.
[119]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0506384 [pdf] - 73784
A near-IR spectrum of the DO white dwarf RE J0503-285
Submitted: 2005-06-16
We present a near-IR spectroscopic analysis of the intriguing DO white dwarf
RE J0503-285. The IR spectrum fails to reveal evidence of the presence of a
spatially unresolved, cool, late-type companion. Hence we have placed an
approximate limit on the spectral-type and mass of a putative companion (later
than M8, M<0.085Msun). This result rules out ongoing interaction between the
white dwarf and a close companion with M>0.085Msun as responsible for the
discrepancies between the observed photospheric abundances and model
predictions. As the possibility remains that there is a cooler companion lying
beyond the detection threshold of this study we use our modelling to estimate
the improvement in sensitivity offered by a Spitzer observation.
[120]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0506384 [pdf] - 73784
A near-IR spectrum of the DO white dwarf RE J0503-285
Submitted: 2005-06-16
We present a near-IR spectroscopic analysis of the intriguing DO white dwarf
RE J0503-285. The IR spectrum fails to reveal evidence of the presence of a
spatially unresolved, cool, late-type companion. Hence we have placed an
approximate limit on the spectral-type and mass of a putative companion (later
than M8, M<0.085Msun). This result rules out ongoing interaction between the
white dwarf and a close companion with M>0.085Msun as responsible for the
discrepancies between the observed photospheric abundances and model
predictions. As the possibility remains that there is a cooler companion lying
beyond the detection threshold of this study we use our modelling to estimate
the improvement in sensitivity offered by a Spitzer observation.
[121]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0505097 [pdf] - 72867
Evidence of polarisation in the prompt gamma-ray emission from GRB
930131 and GRB 960924
Submitted: 2005-05-05
The true nature of the progenitor to GRBs remains elusive; one characteristic
that would constrain our understanding of the GRB mechanism considerably is
gamma-ray polarimetry measurements of the initial burst flux. We present a
method that interprets the prompt GRB flux as it Compton scatters off the
Earth's atmosphere, based on detailed modelling of both the Earth's atmosphere
and the orbiting detectors. The BATSE mission aboard the \textit{CGRO}
monitored the whole sky in the 20 keV - 1 MeV energy band continuously from
April 1991 until June 2000. We present the BATSE Albedo Polarimetry System
(BAPS), and show that GRB 930131 and GRB 960924 provide evidence of
polarisation in their prompt flux that is consistent with degrees of
polarisation of $\Pi>35$% and $\Pi>50$% respectively. While the evidence of
polarisation is strong, the method is unable to strongly constrain the degree
of polarisation beyond a systematics based estimation. Hence the implications
on GRB theory are unclear, and further measurements essential.
[122]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0504652 [pdf] - 72749
TRIDENT: an Infrared Differential Imaging Camera Optimized for the
Detection of Methanated Substellar Companions
Submitted: 2005-04-28
A near-infrared camera in use at the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope (CFHT)
and at the 1.6-m telescope of the Observatoire du Mont-Megantic is described.
The camera is based on a Hawaii-1 1024x1024 HgCdTe array detector. Its main
feature is to acquire three simultaneous images at three wavelengths across the
methane absorption bandhead at 1.6 microns, enabling, in theory, an accurate
subtraction of the stellar point spread function (PSF) and the detection of
faint close methanated companions. The instrument has no coronagraph and
features fast data acquisition, yielding high observing efficiency on bright
stars. The performance of the instrument is described, and it is illustrated by
laboratory tests and CFHT observations of the nearby stars GL526, Ups And and
Chi And. TRIDENT can detect (6 sigma) a methanated companion with delta H = 9.5
at 0.5" separation from the star in one hour of observing time. Non-common path
aberrations and amplitude modulation differences between the three optical
paths are likely to be the limiting factors preventing further PSF attenuation.
Instrument rotation and reference star subtraction improve the detection limit
by a factor of 2 and 4 respectively. A PSF noise attenuation model is presented
to estimate the non-common path wavefront difference effect on PSF subtraction
performance.
[123]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0504627 [pdf] - 72724
Color--Magnitude Diagrams and Luminosity Functions down to the Hydrogen
Burning Limit. III. A Preliminary HST Study of NGC6791
Submitted: 2005-04-28
Using HST ACS/WFC images, we derive the color--magnitude diagram of the old,
metal-rich open cluster NGC 6791 to nearly 29th magnitude in V, which is the
neighborhood of the hydrogen-burning limit.Comparison with isochrones leads to
a discussion of the distance modulus, the reddening, and the age of the
cluster. By making a statistical correction for field stars we derive a
preliminary luminosity function, and a very tentative mass function. The white
dwarf sequence is clearly shown, and has been discussed in a separate paper.
[124]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0504438 [pdf] - 72535
The 2dF QSO Redshift Survey - XV. Correlation analysis of redshift-Space
distortions
Submitted: 2005-04-20
We analyse the redshift-space (z-space) distortions of QSO clustering in the
2dF QSO Redshift Survey (2QZ). To interpret the z-space correlation function,
xi(sigma,pi), we require an accurate model for the QSO real-space correlation
function, xi(r). Although a single power-law xi(r) model fits the projected
correlation function (wp(sigma)) at small scales, it implies somewhat too
shallow a slope for both wp(sigma) and the z-space correlation function, xi(s),
at larger scales > 20 h^(-1) Mpc. Motivated by the form for xi(r) seen in the
2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey (2dFGRS) and in standard LCDM predictions, we use a
double power-law model for xi(r) which gives a good fit to xi(s) and wp(sigma).
The model is parametrized by a slope of gamma=1.45 for 1<r<10 h^(-1) Mpc and
gamma=2.30 for 10<r<40 h^(-1) Mpc. As found for 2dFGRS, the value of beta
determined from the ratio of xi(s)/xi(r) depends sensitively on the form of
xi(r) assumed. With our double power-law form for xi(r), we measure
beta(z=1.4)=0.32(+0.09)(-0.11). Assuming the same model for xi(r) we then
analyse the z-space distortions in the 2QZ xi(sigma,pi) and put constraints on
the values of Omega m and beta(z=1.4), using an improved version of the method
of Hoyle et al. The constraints we derive are Omega m=0.35(+0.19)(-0.13),
beta(z=1.4)=0.50(+0.13)(-0.15), in agreement with our xi(s)/\xi(r) results at
the ~1 sigma level.
[125]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0504306 [pdf] - 260585
Cosmology with Gamma Ray Bursts
Submitted: 2005-04-13
Apparently, Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) are all but standard candles. Their
emission is collimated into a cone and the received flux depends on the cone
aperture angle. Fortunately we can derive the aperture angle through an
achromatic steepening of the lightcurve of the afterglow, and thus we can
measure the "true" energetics of the prompt emission. Ghirlanda et al. (2004)
found that this collimation-corrected energy correlates tightly with
thefrequency at which most of the radiation of the prompt is emitted. Through
this correlation we can infer the burst energy accurately enough for a
cosmological use. Using the best known 15 GRBs we find very encouraging results
that emphasize the cosmological GRB role. Probing the universe with high
accuracy up to high redshifts, GRBs establish a new insight on the cosmic
expanding acceleration history and accomplish the role of "missing link"
between the Cosmic Microwave Background and type Ia supernovae, motivating the
most optimistic hopes for what can be obtained from the bursts detected by
SWIFT.
[126]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0504219 [pdf] - 72316
IRAC Mid-Infrared Imaging of the Hubble Deep Field South: Star Formation
Histories and Stellar Masses of Red Galaxies at z>2
Labbe, I.;
Huang, J.;
Franx, M.;
Rudnick, G.;
Barmby, P.;
Daddi, E.;
van Dokkum, P. G.;
Fazio, G. G.;
Schreiber, N. M. Forster;
Moorwood, A. F. M.;
Rix, H. -W.;
Rottgering, H.;
Trujillo, I.;
van der Werf, P.;
.
Submitted: 2005-04-08
We present deep 3.6 - 8 micron imaging of the Hubble Deep Field South with
IRAC on the Spitzer Space Telescope. We study Distant Red Galaxies (DRGs) at
z>2 selected by Js - Ks > 2.3 and compare them to a sample of Lyman Break
Galaxies (LBGs) at z=2-3. The observed UV-to-8 micron spectral energy
distributions are fit with stellar population models to constrain star
formation histories and derive stellar masses. We find that 70% of the DRGs are
best described by dust-reddened star forming models and 30% are very well fit
with old and ``dead'' models. Using only the I - Ks and Ks - 4.5 micron colors
we can effectively separate the two groups. The dead systems are among the most
massive at z~2.5 (mean stellar mass <M*> = 0.8 x 10^11 Msun) and likely formed
most of their stellar mass at z>5. To a limit of 0.5 x 10^11 Msun their number
density is ~10 x lower than that of local early-type galaxies. Furthermore, we
use the IRAC photometry to derive rest-frame near-infrared J, H, and K fluxes.
The DRGs and LBGs together show a large variation (a factor of 6) in the
rest-frame K-band mass-to-light ratios (M/L_K), implying that even a Spitzer 8
micron-selected sample would be very different from a mass-selected sample. The
average M/L_K of the DRGs is about three times higher than that of the LBGs,
and DRGs dominate the high-mass end. The M/L_K ratios and ages of the two
samples appear to correlate with derived stellar mass, with the most massive
galaxies being the oldest and having the highest mass-to-light ratios, similar
as found in the low-redshift universe.
[127]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0503397 [pdf] - 71779
The white dwarf cooling sequence in NGC 6791
Submitted: 2005-03-17
In the old, populous, and metal-rich open cluster NGC 6791 we have used deep
HST/ACS images to track the white dwarf cooling sequence down to m_F606W~28.5.
The white dwarf luminosity function shows a well defined peak at m_F606W~27.4,
and a bending to the blue in the color--magnitude diagram. If this peak
corresponds to the end of the white dwarf cooling sequence the comparison with
theoretical isochrones provides a cluster age estimate of ~2.4 Gyr, in sharp
contrast with the age of 8--9 Gyr inferred from the main-sequence turn-off. If
the end is at fainter magnitudes, the peak at m_F606W~27.4 is even more
enigmatic. We discuss possible causes, none of them very convincing.
[128]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0502516 [pdf] - 71307
Far-Infrared and Millimeter Continuum Studies of K Giants: Alpha Boo and
Alpha Tau
Submitted: 2005-02-24
We have imaged two normal, non-coronal, infrared-bright K giants, Alpha Tau
and Alpha Boo, in the 1.4-mm and 2.8-mm continuum using the Berkeley Illinois
Maryland Association millimeter array. These stars have been used as important
absolute calibrators for several infrared infrared satellites. Our goals are:
(1) to establish whether these stars radiate as simple photospheres or possess
long-wavelength chromospheres; and (2) to make a connection between millimeter
wave and far-infrared absolute flux calibrations. To accomplish these goals we
also present Infrared Space Observatory Long Wavelength Spectrometer
measurements of both these K giants. The far-infrared and millimeter continuum
radiation is produced in the vicinity of the temperature minimum in Alpha Tau
and Alpha Boo. We find that current photospheric models predict fluxes in
reasonable agreement with those observed for wavelengths which sample the upper
photosphere, namely <=125 microns in Alpha Tau and Alpha Boo. We clearly detect
chromospheric radiation from both stars by 2.8mm (by 1.4mm in the case of Alpha
Boo). Only additional observations can determine precisely where beyond 125
microns the purely radiative models fail. Until then, purely radiative models
for these stars can only be used with confidence for calibration purposes below
125 microns.
[129]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0412328 [pdf] - 69732
Transforming observational data and theoretical isochrones into the
ACS/WFC Vega-mag system
Submitted: 2004-12-14
We propose a zero-point photometric calibration of the data from the ACS/WFC
on board the Hubble Space Telescope, based on a spectrum of Vega and the most
up to date in-flight transmission curves of the camera. This calibration is
accurate at the level of a few hundredths of a magnitude. The main purpose of
this effort is to transform the entire set of evolutionary models by
Pietrinferni et al. (2004) into a simple observational photometric system for
ACS/WFC data, and make them available to the astronomical community. We provide
the zero points for the most used ACS/WFC bands, and give basic recipes for
calibrating both the observed data and the models.
We also present the Colour Magnitude Diagram (CMD) from ACS data of 5
Galactic globular clusters, spanning the metallicity range -2.2<[Fe/H]<-0.04,
and provide fiducial points representing their sequences from several
magnitudes below the turnoff to the red giant branch tip. The observed
sequences are compared with the models in the newly defined photometric system.
[130]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0412197 [pdf] - 69601
Reconstructing Sunyaev-Zeldovich clusters in future CMB experiments
Submitted: 2004-12-08
We present a new method for component separation aimed to extract
Sunyaev-Zeldovich (SZ) galaxy clusters from multifrequency maps of Cosmic
Microwave Background (CMB) experiments. This method is designed to recover
non-Gaussian, spatially localized and sparse signals. We first characterize the
cluster non-Gaussianity by studying it on simulated SZ maps. We the apply our
estimator on simulated observations of the Planck and Atacama Cosmology
Telescope (ACT) experiments. The method presented here outperforms
multi-frequency Wiener filtering both in the reconstructed average intensity
for given input and in the associated error. In the absence of point source
contamination, this technique reconstructs the ACT (Planck) bright (big)
clusters central y parameter with an intensity which is about 84 (43) per cent
of the original input value. The associated error in the reconstruction is
about 12 and 27 per cent for the 50 (12) ACT (Planck) clusters considered. For
ACT, the error is dominated by beam smearing. In the Planck case the error in
the reconstruction is largely determined by the noise level: a noise reduction
by a factor 7 would imply almost perfect reconstruction and 10 per cent error
for a large sample of clusters. We conclude that the selection function of
Planck clusters will strongly depend on the noise properties in different sky
regions, as well as from the specific cluster extraction method assumed.
[131]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0412016 [pdf] - 69420
Metallicities on the Double Main Sequence of omega Centauri Imply Large
Helium Enhancement
Piotto, Giampaolo;
Villanova, Sandro;
Bedin, Luigi R.;
Gratton, Raffaele;
Cassisi, Santi;
Momany, Yazan;
Recio-Blanco, Alejandra;
Lucatello, Sara;
Anderson, Jay;
King, Ivan R.;
Pietrinferni, Adriano;
Carraro, Giovanni;
.
Submitted: 2004-12-01
Having shown in a recent paper that the main sequence of omega Centauri is
split into two distinct branches, we now present spectroscopic results showing
that the bluer sequence is_less_ metal-poor. We have carefully combined
GIRAFFE@VLT spectra of 17 stars on each side of the split into a single
spectrum for each branch, with adequate S/N to show clearly that the stars of
the blue main sequence are less metal poor by 0.3 dex than those of the
dominant red one. From an analysis of the individual spectra, we could not
detect any abundance spread among the blue main sequence stars, while the red
main sequence stars show a 0.2 dex spread in metallicity. We use
stellar-structure models to show that only greatly enhanced helium can explain
the color difference between the two main sequences, and we discuss ways in
which this enhancement could have arisen.
[132]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0411416 [pdf] - 69015
Mid-infrared selection of quasar-2s in Spitzer's First Look Survey
Submitted: 2004-11-15
We present early results from the spectroscopic follow-up of a sample of
candidate obscured AGN selected in the mid-infrared from the Spitzer First Look
Survey. Our selection allows a direct comparison of the numbers of obscured and
unobscured AGN at a given luminosity for the first time, and shows that the
ratio of obscured to unobscured AGN at infrared luminosities corresponding to
low luminosity quasars is ~1:1 at z~0.5. Most of our optically-faint candidate
obscured AGN have the high-ionization, narrow-line spectra expected from type-2
AGN. A composite spectrum shows evidence for Balmer absorption lines,
indicating recent star-formation activity in the host galaxies. There is
tentative evidence for a decrease in the obscured AGN fraction with increasing
AGN luminosity.
[133]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0411320 [pdf] - 68919
Scintillation in the Circinus Galaxy water megamasers
Submitted: 2004-11-11
We present observations of the 22 GHz water vapor megamasers in the Circinus
galaxy made with the Tidbinbilla 70m telescope. These observations confirm the
rapid variability seen earlier by Greenhill et al (1997). We show that this
rapid variability can be explained by interstellar scintillation, based on what
is now known of the interstellar scintillation seen in a significant number of
flat spectrum AGN. The observed variability cannot be fully described by a
simple model of either weak or diffractive scintillation.
[134]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0411186 [pdf] - 68785
The POINT-AGAPE survey II: An Unrestricted Search for Microlensing
Events towards M31
Belokurov, V.;
An, J.;
Evans, N. W.;
Hewett, P.;
Baillon, P.;
Novati, S. Calchi;
Carr, B. J.;
Creze, M.;
Giraud-Heraud, Y.;
Gould, A.;
Jetzer, Ph.;
Kaplan, J.;
Kerins, E.;
Paulin-Henriksson, S.;
Smartt, S. J.;
Stalin, C. S.;
Tsapras, Y.;
Weston, M. J.;
.
Submitted: 2004-11-08
An automated search is carried out for microlensing events using a catalogue
of 44554 variable superpixel lightcurves derived from our three-year monitoring
program of M31. Each step of our candidate selection is objective and
reproducible by a computer. Our search is unrestricted, in the sense that it
has no explicit timescale cut. So, it must overcome the awkward problem of
distinguishing long-timescale microlensing events from long-period stellar
variables. The basis of the selection algorithm is the fitting of the
superpixel lightcurves to two different theoretical models, using variable star
and blended microlensing templates. Only if microlensing is preferred is an
event retained as a possible candidate. Further cuts are made with regard to
(i) sampling, (ii) goodness of fit of the peak to a Paczynski curve, (iii)
consistency of the microlensing hypothesis with the absence of a resolved
source, (iv) achromaticity, (v) position in the colour-magnitude diagram and
(vi) signal-to-noise ratio. Our results are reported in terms of first-level
candidates, which are the most trustworthy, and second-level candidates, which
are possible microlensing but have lower signal-to-noise and are more
questionable. The pipeline leaves just 3 first-level candidates, all of which
have very short full-width half-maximum timescale (<5 days) and 3 second-level
candidates, which have timescales of 31, 36 and 51 days respectively. We also
show 16 third-level lightcurves, as an illustration of the events that just
fail the threshold for designation as microlensing candidates. They are almost
certainly mainly variable stars. Two of the 3 first-level candidates correspond
to known events (PA 00-S3 and PA 00-S4) already reported by the POINT-AGAPE
project. The remaining first-level candidate is new.
[135]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0410494 [pdf] - 68343
Herbig Ae/Be Stars in nearby OB associations
Submitted: 2004-10-20
We have carried out a study of the early type stars in nearby OB associations
spanning an age range of $\sim$ 3 to 16 Myr, with the aim of determining the
fraction of stars which belong to the Herbig Ae/Be class. We studied the B, A,
and F stars in the nearby ($\le 500$ pc) OB associations Upper Scorpius,
Perseus OB2, Lacerta OB1, and Orion OB1, with membership determined from
Hipparcos data. We obtained spectra for 440 Hipparcos stars in these
associations, from which we determined accurate spectral types, visual
extinctions, effective temperatures, luminosities and masses, using Hipparcos
photometry. Using colors corrected for reddening, we find that the Herbig Ae/Be
stars and the Classical Be stars (CBe) occupy clearly different regions in the
JHK diagram. Thus, we use the location on the JHK diagram, as well as the
presence of emission lines and of strong 12 microns flux relative to the visual
to identify the Herbig Ae/Be stars in the associations. We find that the Herbig
Ae/Be stars constitute a small fraction of the early type stellar population
even in the younger associations. Comparing the data from associations with
different ages and assuming that the near-infrared excess in the Herbig Ae/Be
stars arises from optically thick dusty inner disks, we determined the
evolution of the inner disk frequency with age. We find that the inner disk
frequency in the age range 3 - 10 Myr in intermediate mass stars is lower than
that in the low mass stars (< 1msun). This indicates that the time-scales for
disk evolution are much shorter in the intermediate mass stars, which could be
a consequence of more efficient mechanisms of inner disk dispersal (viscous
evolution, dust growth and settling toward the midplane).
[136]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0410476 [pdf] - 68325
Type Ia SN1999cw: photometric and spectroscopic study
Submitted: 2004-10-20
The preliminary analysis of the optical data of SN1999cw show that this
object has the photometric and spectroscopic behavior of a Type Ia supernova
similar to SN1991T, reaching an apparent magnitude at maximum B(max)=14.30 and
a Delta m_{15}(B)=0.94.
[137]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0410459 [pdf] - 68308
Discovery of Irradiation Induced Variations in the Light Curve of the
Classical Nova Cygni 2001 No.2 (V2275 Cyg)
Submitted: 2004-10-19
We present the CCD photometry, light curve and time series analysis of the
classical nova V2275 Cyg (N Cyg 2001 No.2). The source was observed for 14
nights in total using an R filter in 2002 and 2003 with the 1.5 m
Russian-Turkish joint telescope (RTT150) at the TUBITAK (The Scientific and
Technical Research Council of Turkey) National Observatory in Antalya Turkey,
as part of a large program on the CCD photometry of Cataclysmic Variables
(CVs). We report the detection of two distinct periodicities in the light curve
of the nova : a) P_1=0.31449(15) d -- 7.6 h, b) P_2=0.017079(17) d -- 24.6 min.
The first period is evident in both 2002 and 2003 whereas the second period is
only detected in the 2003 data set. We interpret the first period as the
orbital period of the system and attribute the orbital variations to aspect
changes of the secondary irradiated by the hot WD. We suggest that the nova was
a Super Soft X-ray source in 2002 and, perhaps, in 2003. The second period
could be a QPO originating from the oscillation of the ionization front (due to
a hot WD) below the inner Lagrange point as predicted by King (1989) or a beat
frequency in the system as a result of the magnetic nature of the WD if steady
accretion has already been re-established.
[138]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0408055 [pdf] - 66546
Solar model with CNO revised abundances
Submitted: 2004-08-03, last modified: 2004-08-05
Recent three-dimensional, NLTE analyses of the solar spectrum have shown a
significant reduction in the C, N, O and Ne abundances leading to a Z/X ratio
of the order of 0.0177. We have computed solar models with this new mixture in
the OPAL opacity tables. The present He abundance we find seems rather
consistent with the helioseismic value. However, the convective envelope is too
shallow, and diffusion, even if it reduces the discrepancy, is not able to give
the current value. We present some numerical experiments consisting in changing
the diffusion velocities and/or the value of opacity at the base of the
convective envelope.
[139]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0408050 [pdf] - 755790
Direct Detection of Sub-stellar Companions with MIDI
Submitted: 2004-08-03
Current detection methods of planetary companions do not allow retrieving
their spectral information properties. The method of Differential
Interferometry has the potential to complement such information by comparing
interferometric observables in various spectral channels. We outline the basic
aspects of this method and how it can soon be realised by the Mid-infrared
Interferometric instrument (MIDI) at the Very Large Telescope Interferometer
(VLTI) observatory. A set of possible candidates for such direct observation
has been selected among currently identified planetary companions. Differential
Interferometry with MIDI would be complementary to other ground-based programs.
The method may also be an alternative for future space-based planetary
spectroscopy.
[140]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0407297 [pdf] - 66139
Supermassive Black Holes in Active Galactic Nuclei. II. Calibration of
the M-sigma Relationship for AGNs
Submitted: 2004-07-14
We calibrate reverberation-based black hole masses in active galactic nuclei
(AGNs) by using the correlation between black hole mass, M, and bulge/spheroid
stellar velocity dispersion, sigma. We use new measurements of sigma for 6 AGNs
and published velocity dispersions for 10 others, in conjunction with improved
reverberation mapping results, to determine the scaling factor required to
bring reverberation-based black hole masses into agreement with the quiescent
galaxy M-sigma relationship. The scatter in the AGN black hole masses is found
to be less than a factor of 3. The current observational uncertainties preclude
use of the scaling factor to discriminate between broad-line region models.
[141]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0407261 [pdf] - 66103
ISOCAM Observations of Intermediate-redshift Galaxy Clusters at 7 and 15
microns
Submitted: 2004-07-13
The gravitationally lensing clusters A370, A2218, A1689 and CL0024+1654 were
observed with the Infrared Space Observatory (ISO) using ISOCAM at 6.7 and 14.3
microns (hereafter 7 and 15 microns respectively). A total of 178 sources were
detected in the whole set, 70 of them being cluster objects. The spectral
energy distribution of a subset of sources was calculated using GRASIL. The
results for the total infrared luminosity and the estimation of the star
formation rate are presented for the non stellar objects for which the SED has
been determined. The majority of the cluster galaxies in A2218 are best fit by
models of quiescent ellipticals. In Cl0024+1654, most of the galaxies lying on
the Butcher-Oemler region of the colour-magnitude diagram are best fit by disk
galaxies, while those on the main sequence area have in general SEDs
corresponding to post-starburst galaxies. The population of each cluster is
compared with the field population, as well as with the population of other
clusters. A significant number of Luminous IR Galaxies (LIRGs) is detected in
CL0024+1654, while only one LIRG has been observed in total in A370, A1689, and
A2218. This result supports the link between LIRGs in clusters and recent or
ongoing cluster merger activity as well as the need for extending the
observations to the outer parts of clusters.
[142]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0407173 [pdf] - 66015
Angular diameters, fluxes and extinction of compact planetary nebulae:
further evidence for steeper extinction towards the Bulge
Submitted: 2004-07-08
We present values for angular diameter, flux and extinction for 70 Galactic
planetary nebulae observed using narrow band filters. Angular diameters are
derived using constant emissivity shell and photoionization line emission
models. The mean of the results from these two models are presented as our best
estimate. Contour plots of 36 fully resolved objects are included and the low
intensity contours often reveal an elliptical structure that is not always
apparent from FWHM measurements. Flux densities are determined, and for both
H-alpha and O[III] there is little evidence of any systematic differences
between observed and catalogued values. Observed H-alpha extinction values are
determined using observed H-alpha and catalogued radio fluxes. H-alpha
extinction values are also derived from catalogued H-alpha and H-beta flux
values by means of an Rv dependent extinction law. Rv is then calculated in
terms of observed extinction values and catalogued H-alpha and H-beta flux
values. Comparing observed and catalogue extinction values for a subset of
Bulge objects, observed values tend to be lower than catalogue values
calculated with Rv = 3.1. For the same subset we calculate <Rv> = 2.0,
confirming that toward the Bulge interstellar extinction is steeper than Rv =
3.1. For the inner Galaxy a relation with the higher supernova rate is
suggested, and that the low-density warm ionized medium is the site of the
anomalous extinction. Lowvalues of extinction are also derived using dust
models with a turnover radius of 0.08 microns.
[143]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0406633 [pdf] - 65790
Interpreting the Relationship Between Galaxy Luminosity, Color and
Environment
Submitted: 2004-06-28
We study the relationship between galaxy luminosity, color, and environment
in a cosmological simulation of galaxy formation. We compare the predicted
relationship with that found for SDSS galaxies and find that the model
successfully predicts most of the qualitative features seen in the data, but
also shows some interesting differences. Specifically, the simulation predicts
that the local density around bright red galaxies is a strong increasing
function of luminosity, but does not depend much on color at fixed luminosity.
Moreover, we show that this is due to central galaxies in dark matter halos
whose baryonic masses correlate strongly with halo mass. The simulation also
predicts that the local density around blue galaxies is a strong increasing
function of color, but does not depend much on luminosity at fixed color. We
show that this is due to satellite galaxies in halos whose stellar ages
correlate with halo mass. Finally, the simulation fails to predict the
luminosity dependence of environment observed around low luminosity red
galaxies. However, we show that this is most likely due to the simulation's
limited resolution. A study of a higher resolution, smaller volume simulation
suggests that this dependence is caused by the fact that all low luminosity red
galaxies are satellites in massive halos, whereas intermediate luminosity red
galaxies are a mixture of satellites in massive halos and central galaxies in
less massive halos.
[144]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0406076 [pdf] - 65233
The double main sequence of Omega Centauri
Submitted: 2004-06-03
Recent, high precision photometry of Omega Centauri, the biggest Galactic
globular cluster, has been obtained with Hubble Space Telescope. The color
magnitude diagram reveals an unexpected bifurcation of colors in the main
sequence (MS). The newly found double MS, the multiple turnoffs and subgiant
branches, and other sequences discovered in the past along the red giant branch
of this cluster add up to a fascinating but frustrating puzzle. Among the
possible explanations for the blue main sequence an anomalous overabundance of
helium is suggested. The hypothesis will be tested with a set of FLAMES@VLT
data we have recently obtained (ESO DDT program), and with forthcoming ACS@HST
images.
[145]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0405399 [pdf] - 64919
A Far Infrared Polarimeter
Submitted: 2004-05-20
We describe an experiment to measure calibration sources, the polarization of
Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation (CMBR) and the polarization induced on
the CMBR from S-Z effects, using a polarimeter, MITOPol, that will be employed
at the MITO telescope. Two modulation methods are presented and compared: an
amplitude modulation with a Fresnel double rhomb and a phase modulation with a
modified Martin-Puplett interferometer. A first light is presented from the
campaign (summer 2003) that has permitted to estimate the instrument spurious
polarization using the second modulation method.
[146]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0405208 [pdf] - 64728
The Oxford-Dartmouth Thirty Degree Survey I: Observations and
Calibration of a Wide-Field Multi-Band Survey
MacDonald, Emily C.;
Allen, Paul;
Dalton, Gavin;
Moustakas, Leonidas A.;
Heymans, Catherine;
Edmondson, Edward;
Blake, Chris;
Clewley, Lee;
Hammell, Molly C.;
Olding, Ed;
Miller, Lance;
Rawlings, Steve;
Wall, Jasper;
Wegner, Gary;
Wolf, Christian;
.
Submitted: 2004-05-11
The Oxford Dartmouth Thirty Degree Survey (ODTS) is a deep, wide, multi-band
imaging survey designed to cover a total of 30 square degrees in BVRi'Z, with a
subset of U and K band data, in four separate fields of 5-10 deg^2 centred at
00:18:24 +34:52, 09:09:45 +40:50, 13:40:00 +02:30 and 16:39:30 +45:24.
Observations have been made using the Wide Field Camera on the 2.5-m Isaac
Newton Telescope in La Palma to average limiting depths (5 sigma Vega, aperture
magnitudes) of U=24.8, B=25.6, V=25.0, R=24.6, and i'=23.5, with observations
taken in ideal conditions reaching the target depths of U=25.3, B=26.2, V=25.7,
R=25.4, and i'=24.6. The INT Z band data was found to be severely effected by
fringing and, consequently, is now being obtained at the MDM observatory in
Arizona. A complementary K-band survey has also been carried out at MDM,
reaching an average depth of K_{5\sigma}~18.5. At present, approximately 23
deg^2 of the ODTS have been observed, with 3.5 deg^2 of the K band survey
completed. This paper details the survey goals, field selection, observation
strategy and data reduction procedure, focusing on the photometric calibration
and catalogue construction. Preliminary photometric redshifts have been
obtained for a subsample of the objects with R <= 23. These results are
presented alongside a brief description of the photometric redshift
determination technique used. The median redshift of the survey is estimated to
be z~0.7 from a combination of the ODTS photometric redshifts and comparison
with the redshift distributions of other surveys. Finally, galaxy number counts
for the ODTS are presented which are found to be in excellent agreement with
previous studies.
[147]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0401374 [pdf] - 62244
The POINT-AGAPE Survey I: The Variable Stars in M31
An, Jin H.;
Evans, N. W.;
Hewett, P.;
Baillon, P.;
Novati, S. Calchi;
Carr, B. J.;
Creze, M.;
Giraud-Heraud, Y.;
Gould, A.;
Jetzer, Ph.;
Kaplan, J.;
Kerins, E.;
Paulin-Henriksson, S.;
Smartt, S. J.;
Stalin, C. S.;
Tsapras, Y.;
.
Submitted: 2004-01-19, last modified: 2004-03-08
The POINT-AGAPE collaboration has been monitoring M31 for three seasons with
the Wide Field Camera on the Isaac Newton Telescope. In each season, data are
taken for one hour per night for roughly sixty nights during the six months
that M31 is visible. The two fields of view straddle the central bulge,
northwards and southwards. We have calculated the locations, periods and
amplitudes of 35414 variable stars in M31 as a by-product of our microlensing
search. The variables are classified according to their period and amplitude of
variation. They are classified into population I and II Cepheids, Miras and
semi-regular long-period variables. The population I Cepheids are associated
with the spiral arms, while the central concentration of the Miras and
long-period variables varies noticeably, the stars with brighter (and shorter)
variations being much more centrally concentrated. A crucial role in the
microlensing experiment is played by the asymmetry signal. It was initially
assumed that the variable stars would not be a serious problem as their
distributions would be symmetric. We demonstrate that this assumption is not
correct. We find that differential extinction associated with the dust lanes
causes the variable star distributions to be asymmetric. The size and direction
of the asymmetry of the variable stars is measured as a function of period and
amplitude of variation. The implications of this discovery for the successful
completion of the microlensing experiments towards M31 are discussed.
(Abridged)
[148]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0403112 [pdf] - 63303
Omega Centauri: The Population Puzzle Goes Deeper
Submitted: 2004-03-04
We present HST observations that show a bifurcation of colors in the middle
main sequence of the globular cluster Omega Centauri. We see this in three
different fields, observed with different cameras and filters. We also present
high precision photometry of a central ACS field which shows a number of
main-sequence turnoffs and subgiant branches. The double main sequence, the
multiple turnoffs and subgiant branches, and other population sequences
discovered in the past along the red giant branch of this cluster add up to a
fascinating but frustrating puzzle. We suggest various explanations, none of
them very conclusive.
[149]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0402154 [pdf] - 62668
An X-ray review of MS1054-0321: hot or not?
Submitted: 2004-02-06
XMM-Newton observations are presented for the z=0.83 cluster of galaxies
MS1054-0321, the highest redshift cluster in the Einstein Extended Medium
Sensitivity Survey (EMSS). The temperature inferred by the XMM-Newton data,
T=7.2 (+0.7, -0.6) keV, is much lower than the temperature previously reported
from ASCA data, T=12.3 (+3.1, -2.2) keV (Donahue et al. 1998), and a little
lower than the Chandra temperature, T=10.4(+1.7, -1.5) keV, determined by
Jeltema et al. 2001. The discrepancy between the newly derived temperature and
the previously derived temperatures is discussed in detail. If one allows the
column density to be a free parameter, then the best fit temperature becomes
T=8.6 (+1.2, -1.1) keV, and the best fit column density becomes N_(H)=1.33
(+0.15 -0.14) x 10^20 atoms/cm^2. The iron line is well detected in the
XMM-Newton spectrum with a value for the abundance of Z=0.33 (+0.19 -0.18)
Zsol, in very good agreement with previous determinations. The derived XMM
X-ray luminosity for the overall cluster in the 2-10 keV energy band is
L_X=(3.81 +/- 0.19) x 10^44 h^-2 erg s^-1 while the bolometric luminosity is
L_BOL=(8.05+/-0.40) x 10^44 h^-2 erg s^-1. The XMM-Newton data confirm the
substructure in the cluster X-ray morphology already seen by ROSAT and in much
more detail by Chandra. The central weak lensing clump is coincident with the
main cluster component and has a temperature T=8.1 (+1.3, -1.2) keV. The
western weak lensing clump coincides with the western X-ray component which is
much cooler with a temperature T=5.6 (+0.8, -0.6)$ keV. Given the newly
determined temperature, MS1054-0321 is no longer amongst the hottest clusters
known.
[150]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0401479 [pdf] - 62349
Are dust shell models well-suited to explain interferometric data of
late-type stars in the near-infrared?
Submitted: 2004-01-22
Recently available near-infrared interferometric data on late-type stars show
a strong increase of diameter for asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars between
the K (2.0 - 2.4 \mu m) and L (3.4 - 4.1 \mu m) bands. Aiming at an explanation
of these findings, we chose the objects \alpha Orionis (Betelgeuse), SW
Virginis, and R Leonis, which are of different spectral types and stages of
evolution, and which are surrounded by circumstellar envelopes with different
optical thicknesses. For these stars, we compared observations with spherically
symmetric dust shell models. Photometric and 11 \mu m interferometric data were
also taken into account to further constrain the models. -- [...] -- We
conclude that AGB models comprising a photosphere and dust shell, although
consistent with SED data and also interferometric data in K and at 11 \mu m,
cannot explain the visibility data in L; an additional source of model opacity,
possibly related to a gas component, is needed in L to be consistent with the
visibility data.
[151]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0401367 [pdf] - 62237
The origin of HI-deficiency in galaxies on the outskirts of the Virgo
cluster. II. Companions and uncertainties in distances and deficiencies
Submitted: 2004-01-19
The origin of the deficiency in neutral Hydrogen of 13 spiral galaxies lying
in the outskirts of the Virgo cluster is reassessed. If these galaxies have
passed through the core of the cluster, their interstellar gas should have been
lost through ram pressure stripping by the hot X-ray emitting gas of the
cluster. We analyze the positions of these HI-deficient and other spiral
galaxies in velocity-distance plots, in which we include our compilation of
velocity-distance data on 61 elliptical galaxies, and compare with simulated
velocity-distance diagrams obtained from cosmological N-body simulations. We
find that ~20% relative Tully-Fisher distance errors are consistent with the
great majority of the spirals, except for a small number of objects, whose
positions in the velocity-distance diagram suggest grossly incorrect distances,
which implies that the Tully-Fisher error distribution function has
non-gaussian wings. Moreover, we find that the distance errors may lead to an
incorrect fitting of the Tolman-Bondi solution that can generate significant
errors in the distance and especially the mass estimates of the cluster. We
suggest 4 possibilities for the outlying HI-deficient spirals (in decreasing
frequency): 1) they have large relative distance errors and are in fact close
enough (at distances between 12.7 and 20.9 Mpc from us) to the cluster to have
passed through its core and seen their gas removed by ram pressure stripping;
2) their gas is converted to stars by tidal interactions with other galaxies;
3) their gas is heated during recent mergers with smaller galaxies; and 4) they
are in reality not HI-deficient (e.g. S0/a's misclassified as Sa's).
[152]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0401331 [pdf] - 62201
Simulating stochastically excited oscillations. The mode lifetime of xi
Hya
Submitted: 2004-01-16
The discovery of solar-like oscillations in the giant star xy Hya (G7III) was
reported by Frandsen et al. (2002). Their frequency analysis was very limited
due to alias problems in the data set (caused by single-site observations). The
extent to which the aliasing affected their analysis was unclear due to the
unknown damping time of the stellar oscillation modes. In this paper we
describe a simulator created to generate time series of stochastically excited
oscillations, which takes as input an arbitrary window function and includes
both white and non-white noise. We also outline a new method to compare a large
number of simulated time series with an observed time series to determine the
damping time, amplitude, and limited information on the degree of the
stochastically excited modes. For xi Hya we find the most likely amplitude to
be ~ 2 m/s, in good agreement with theory (Houdek & Gough, 2002), and the most
likely damping time to be ~ 2 days, which is much shorter than the theoretical
value of 15-20 days calculated by Houdek & Gough (2002).
[153]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0311107 [pdf] - 60687
The Extragalactic Origin of the Arcturus Group
Submitted: 2003-11-04, last modified: 2003-12-08
We reanalyze the group of stars associated kinematically with Arcturus (Eggen
1971), and confirm that they constitute a peculiar grouping of metal-poor stars
with similar apocentric radius, common angular momentum, and distinct metal
abundance patterns. These properties are consistent with those expected for a
group of stars originating from the debris of a disrupted satellite. The
Arcturus group stands out clearly in the catalog of Beers et al. (2000) as well
as in other compilations of metal-poor stars in the solar neighborhood. Its
angular momentum appears too low to arise from dynamical perturbations induced
by the Galactic bar, and coincides with that of the kinematically-peculiar
population of stars identified above and below the Galactic plane by Gilmore,
Wyse & Norris (2002): the Arcturus group is in all likelihood the solar
neighborhood extension of such population. Further analysis is needed to
confirm our proposal that Arcturus, together with some of the brightest stars
in the night sky, may have formed beyond the confines of the Galaxy. However,
validating the extragalactic origin of the Arcturus group would lend support to
the prevalence of accretion events envisioned in hierarchical models of galaxy
formation, and would suggest that early mergers may have contributed a
substantial fraction of the old and metal-deficient stars in the Galactic disk.
[154]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0311609 [pdf] - 133708
The XMM-Newton/2dF survey - II. The nature of X-ray faint optically
bright X-ray sources
Submitted: 2003-11-27
In this paper we investigate the properties of low X-ray-to-optical flux
ratio sources detected in a wide area (2.5deg^2) shallow
(f(0.5-8keV)~10e-14cgs) XMM-Newton survey. We find a total of 26 sources (5% of
the total X-ray selected population) with log f_X/f_{opt}<-0.9 to the above
flux limit. Optical spectroscopy is available for 20 of these low
X-ray-to-optical flux ratio objects. Most of them are found to be associated
with Galactic stars (total of 8) and broad line AGNs (total of 8).We also find
two sources with optical spectra showing absorption and/or narrow emission
lines and X-ray/optical properties suggesting AGN activity. Another two sources
are found to be associated with low redshift galaxies with narrow emission line
optical spectra, X-ray luminosities L_X(0.5-8keV)~10e41cgs and logf_X/f_opt ~
-2 suggesting `normal' star-forming galaxies. Despite the small number
statistics the sky density of `normal' X-ray selected star-forming galaxies at
the flux limit of the present sample is low consistent with previous ROSAT HRI
deep surveys. Also, the number density estimated here is in good agreement with
both the logN-logS of `normal' galaxies in the Chandra Deep Field North
(extrapolated to bright fluxes) and model predictions based on the X-ray
luminosity function of local star-forming galaxies.
[155]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0311263 [pdf] - 60843
Sunyaev-Zeldovich Observations of Massive Clusters of Galaxies
Gomez, P.;
Romer, A. K.;
Peterson, J. B.;
Chase, W.;
Runyan, M.;
Holzapfel, W.;
Kuo, C. L.;
Newcomb, M.;
Ruhl, J.;
Goldstein, J.;
Lange, A.;
.
Submitted: 2003-11-11
We present detections of the Sunyaev-Zeldovich Effect (SZE) at 150GHz and
275GHz for the X-ray luminous z=0.299 cluster 1E0657-67. These observations
were obtained as part of an X-ray, weak lensing, and SZE survey of nearby X-ray
bright clusters. The SZE maps were made with the ACBAR (150, 210, 275 GHz)
bolometer array installed at the Viper telescope located at the South Pole. We
also present preliminary results from a blind SZE cluster survey.
[156]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0311261 [pdf] - 60841
Imaging the Sunyaev Zel'dovich Effect using ACBAR on Viper
Romer, A. K.;
Gomez, P. L.;
Cantalupo, C. M.;
Daub, M. D.;
Goldstein, J. H.;
Holzapfel, W. L.;
Kuo, C. L.;
Lange, A. E.;
Lueker, M.;
Newcomb, M.;
Peterson, J. B.;
Ruhl, J. E.;
Runyan, M. C.;
Torbet, E.;
Reichardt, C.;
.
Submitted: 2003-11-11
During 2001 and 2002, observations of several X-ray bright clusters of
galaxies were conducted using the ACBAR Bolometer Array on the South Pole Viper
telescope. A multi-frequency analysis of these clusters is currently underway.
This multi-frequency analysis includes 150, 220 and 275 GHz data from ACBAR,
X-ray imaging and spectroscopy from Chandra and XMM-Newton, and weak lensing
data from the CTIO 4m Blanco telescope. We describe here how ACBAR can be used
to create fully sampled cluster images and present such images for four of the
clusters in our sample; Abell 3266, Abell 3827, Abell S1063 and 1E0657-56. In
these images, the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Effect is clearly detected.
[157]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0310868 [pdf] - 60531
The mass distribution in early type disk galaxies
Submitted: 2003-10-30
We are studying the mass distribution in a sample of 50 early type spiral
galaxies, with morphological type betweens S0 and Sab and absolute magnitudes
M_B between -18 and -22; they form the massive and high-surface brightness
extreme of the disk galaxy population. Our study is designed to investigate the
relation between dark and luminous matter in these systems, of which very
little yet is known.
From a combination of WSRT HI observations and long-slit optical spectra, we
have obtained high-quality rotation curves. The rotation velocities always rise
very fast in the center; in the outer regions, they are often declining, with
the outermost measured velocity 10-25% lower than the maximum.
We decompose the rotation curves into contributions from the luminous
(stellar and gaseous) and dark matter. The stellar disks and bulges always
dominate the rotation curves within the inner few disk scale lengths, and are
responsible for the decline in the outer parts. As an example, we present here
the decompositions for UGC 9133. We are able to put tight upper and lower
limits on the stellar mass-to-light ratios.
[158]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0310709 [pdf] - 60372
The origin of HI-deficiency in galaxies on the outskirts of the Virgo
cluster. I. How far can galaxies bounce out of clusters?
Submitted: 2003-10-24
Spiral galaxies that are deficient in neutral Hydrogen are observed on the
outskirts of the Virgo cluster. If their orbits have crossed the inner parts of
the cluster, their interstellar gas may have been lost through ram pressure
stripping by the hot X-ray emitting gas of the cluster. We estimate the maximum
radius out to which galaxies can bounce out of a virialized system using
analytical arguments and cosmological N-body simulations. In particular, we
derive an expression for the turnaround radius in a flat cosmology with a
cosmological constant that is simpler than previously derived expressions. We
find that the maximum radius reached by infalling galaxies as they bounce out
of their cluster is roughly between 1 and 2.5 virial radii. Comparing to the
virial radius of the Virgo cluster, which we estimate from X-ray observations,
these HI-deficient galaxies appear to lie significantly further away from the
cluster center. Therefore, if their distances to the cluster core are correct,
the HI-deficient spiral galaxies found outside of the Virgo cluster cannot have
lost their gas by ram pressure from the hot intracluster gas.
[159]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0310540 [pdf] - 60203
NGC6822: short period variable stars, stellar population and distance
scale
Submitted: 2003-10-20
Results are presented on a study of the short period variable stars in the
dwarf irregular galaxy NGC6822. We observed an almost uniformely populated
classical instability strip from the Horizontal Branch up to the Classical
Cepheids region. The main goal we achieved from the analysis of the faint
sample is the first detection of RR Lyrae stars in this galaxy.
[160]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0310094 [pdf] - 59757
An HI census of Loose Groups of Galaxies
Submitted: 2003-10-03
We present results from our Parkes Multibeam HI survey of 3 loose groups of
galaxies that are analogous to the Local Group. This is a survey of groups
containing only spiral galaxies with mean separations of a few hundred kpc, and
total areas of approximately 1 sq. Mpc; groups similar to our own Local Group.
We present a census of the HI-rich objects in these groups down to an M(HI),
1-sigma sensitivity ~7x10^5 M(sun), as well as the detailed properties of these
detections from follow-up Compact Array observations. We found 7 new HI-rich
members in the 3 groups, all of which have stellar counterparts and are,
therefore, typical dwarf galaxies. The ratio of low-mass to high-mass gas-rich
galaxies in these groups is less than in the Local Group meaning that the
``missing satellite'' problem is not unique. No high-velocity cloud analogs
were found in any of the groups. If HVCs in these groups are the same as in the
Local Group, this implies that HVCs must be located within ~300-400 kpc of the
Milky Way.
[161]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0309451 [pdf] - 59278
The Impact of the Chemical Stratification of White Dwarfs on the
Classification of Classical Novae
Submitted: 2003-09-16
We analyse the impact of the initial abundances of the underlying white dwarf
core on the nucleosynthesis accompanying classical nova outbursts, in the
framework of hydrodynamic models of the explosion. Specifically, we take into
account the chemical stratification of the white dwarf. It turns out that the
presence of a thick CO-buffer on top of the ONe-rich core, as results from
detailed calculations of previous evolution of the progenitor star, may lead to
significant amounts of both 7Li and 26Al, after an outburst that, due to the
lack of neon isotopes in the ejecta, would be misclassified as a non-neon nova
(i.e., CO nova).
[162]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0309451 [pdf] - 59278
The Impact of the Chemical Stratification of White Dwarfs on the
Classification of Classical Novae
Submitted: 2003-09-16
We analyse the impact of the initial abundances of the underlying white dwarf
core on the nucleosynthesis accompanying classical nova outbursts, in the
framework of hydrodynamic models of the explosion. Specifically, we take into
account the chemical stratification of the white dwarf. It turns out that the
presence of a thick CO-buffer on top of the ONe-rich core, as results from
detailed calculations of previous evolution of the progenitor star, may lead to
significant amounts of both 7Li and 26Al, after an outburst that, due to the
lack of neon isotopes in the ejecta, would be misclassified as a non-neon nova
(i.e., CO nova).
[163]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0309451 [pdf] - 59278
The Impact of the Chemical Stratification of White Dwarfs on the
Classification of Classical Novae
Submitted: 2003-09-16
We analyse the impact of the initial abundances of the underlying white dwarf
core on the nucleosynthesis accompanying classical nova outbursts, in the
framework of hydrodynamic models of the explosion. Specifically, we take into
account the chemical stratification of the white dwarf. It turns out that the
presence of a thick CO-buffer on top of the ONe-rich core, as results from
detailed calculations of previous evolution of the progenitor star, may lead to
significant amounts of both 7Li and 26Al, after an outburst that, due to the
lack of neon isotopes in the ejecta, would be misclassified as a non-neon nova
(i.e., CO nova).
[164]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0308193 [pdf] - 58472
Imaging and spectroscopy of galaxies associated with two z~0.7 damped
Lyman-alpha absorption systems
Submitted: 2003-08-11
We have identified galaxies near two quasars which are at the redshift of
damped Lyman-alpha (DLA) systems in the UV spectra of the quasars. Both
galaxies are actively forming stars. One galaxy has a luminosity close to the
break in the local galaxy luminosity function, L*, the other is significantly
fainter than L* and appears to be interacting with a nearby companion. Despite
the strong selection effects favoring spectroscopic identification of the most
luminous DLA galaxies, many of the spectroscopically-identified DLA galaxies in
the literature are sub-L*, suggesting that the majority of the DLA population
is probably sub-L*, in contrast to MgII absorbers at similar redshifts whose
mean luminosity is close to L*.
[165]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0308156 [pdf] - 58435
Photometrical Review of Open Cluster M25
Submitted: 2003-08-09
The young open star cluster M25 (IC 4725) is located in the direction of the
galactic center in a crowded region, near much irregular absorption features on
Sagittarius arm. This cluster has some difficult observing problems due to its
southern location. The mass data available in the literature have been gathered
to reinvestigate this cluster using most photometric tools to determine its
main photometric parameters. This system is found to be at a distance of 600 pc
from the sun, of -52.82 pc from the galactic plane; and the median age is 9.45
x 10^(7) yr. More than 220 stars with mean reddening of 0.50 mag and absorption
of 1.62 mag are found within the cluster.
[166]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0306609 [pdf] - 57690
On the calibration of the COBE/IRAS dust emission reddening maps
Submitted: 2003-06-29
In this work we study the spectral properties (3600 - 6800 A) of the nuclear
region of early-type galaxies at low (|b|<25, intermediate (including
surroundings of the Magellanic Clouds) and high (South Polar Cap) Galactic
latitudes. We determine the E(B-V) reddening values of the galaxies by matching
their continuum distribution with respect to those of reddening-free spectral
galaxy templates with similar stellar populations. We also compare the
spectroscopic reddening value of each galaxy with that derived from 100 micron
dust emission (E(B-V)_{FIR}) in its line of sight, and we find that there is
agreement up to E(B-V)=0.25. Beyond this limit E(B-V)_{FIR} values are higher.
Taking into account the data up to E(B-V) \approx 0.7, we derive a calibration
factor of 0.016 between the spectroscopic E(B-V) values and Schlegel et al.'s
(1998) opacities. By combining this result with an A_K extinction map built
within ten degrees of the Galactic centre using Bulge giants as probes (Dutra
et al. 2003), we extended the calibration of dust emission reddening maps to
low Galactic latitudes down to |b|=4 and E(B-V)= 1.6 (A_V \approx 5). According
to this new calibration, a multiplicative factor of approximately 0.75 must be
applied to the COBE/IRAS dust emission reddening maps.
[167]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0306307 [pdf] - 57388
Deep Near Infrared Mapping of Young and Old Stars in Blue Compact Dwarf
Galaxies
Submitted: 2003-06-16
We analyze J, H and Ks near-infrared data for 9 Blue Compact Dwarf (BCD)
galaxies, selected from a larger sample that we have already studied in the
optical. We present contour maps, surface brightness and color profiles, as
well as color maps of the sample galaxies. The morphology of the BCDs in the
NIR has been found to be basically the same as in the optical. The inner
regions of these systems are dominated by the starburst component. At low
surface brightness levels the emission is due to the underlying host galaxy;
the latter is characterized by red, radially constant colors and isophotes well
fit by ellipses. We derive accurate optical near--infrared host galaxy colors
for eight of the sample galaxies; these colors are typical of an evolved
stellar population. Interestingly, optical near--infrared color maps reveal the
presence of a complex, large-scale absorption pattern in three of the sample
galaxies. We study the applicability of the Sersic law to describe the surface
brightness profiles of the underlying host galaxy, and find that, because of
the limited surface brightness interval over which the fit can be made, the
derived Sersic parameters are very sensitive to the selected radial interval
and to errors in the sky subtraction. Fitting an exponential model gives
generally more stable results, and can provide a useful tool to quantify the
structural properties of the host galaxy and compare them with those of other
dwarf classes as well as with those of star-forming dwarfs at higher redshifts.
[168]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0306295 [pdf] - 57376
Lithium in the Symbiotic Mira V407 Cyg
Submitted: 2003-06-14
We report an identification of the lithium resonance doublet LiI 6708A in the
spectrum of V407 Cyg, a symbiotic Mira with a pulsation period of about 745
days. The resolution of the spectra used was R~18500 and the measured
equivalent width of the line is ~0.34A. It is suggested that the lithium
enrichment is due to hot bottom burning in the intermediate mass AGB variable,
although other possible origins cannot be totally ruled out. In contrast to
lithium-rich AGB stars in the Magellanic clouds, ZrO 5551A, 6474A absorption
bands were not found in the spectrum of V407Cyg. These are the bands used to
classify the S-type stars at low-resolution. Although we identified weak ZrO
5718A, 6412A these are not visible in the low-resolution spectra, and we
therefore classify the Mira in V407 Cyg as an M type. This, together with other
published work, suggests lithium enrichment can precede the third dredge up of
s-process enriched material in galactic AGB stars.
[169]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0306129 [pdf] - 57210
Chandra Discovery of an X-ray jet and Extended X-ray Structure in z=0.63
quasar, B2 0738+313
Siemiginowska, Aneta;
Stanghellini, Carlo;
Brunetti, Gianfranco;
Fiore, Fabrizio;
Aldcroft, Thomas L.;
Bechtold, Jill;
Elvis, Martin;
Murray, Stephen S.;
Antonelli, L. A.;
Colafrancesco, S.;
.
Submitted: 2003-06-05
We have made a 30 ksec Chandra observation of the redshift z=0.63 GPS quasar
B2 0738+313. We detected X-ray emission from the core and have discovered a 200
kpc (projected on the sky) X-ray jet. The X-ray jet is narrow and curves,
following the extended radio structure to the south of the quasar, and ending
with a hot spot at the southernmost part of the radio lobe. The jet has a knot
at ~13 arcsec away from the core. The knot emission is consistent with the
X-rays being created by the inverse Compton scattering of the cosmic microwave
background (CMB) photons and requires jet bulk Lorentz factors of a few
(Gamma_{bulk} ~ 5-7). We discuss the emission mechanisms that may be
responsible for the jet emission. We present new VLA data of the core and jet,
and discuss the relation between the extended radio and X-ray emission.
Extended emission observed in several GPS sources has been interpreted as a
signature of the source past activity, while the GPS source is young and newly
expanded. We argue that B2~0738+313 may be an example of a new class of radio
sources similar to the FRII radio galaxies in their high jet bulk velocities,
but with the powerful GPS-like nucleus.
B2 0738+313 also has two damped Lyman-alpha systems along the line of sight,
at z_{abs} = 0.0912 and 0.2212. We discuss the possible connection between the
X-ray absorption (7.2+/-0.9 e20 cm(-2)) detected in the ACIS spectrum and these
two intervening absorbers. We also investigate an extended structure within the
central 10 arcsec of the core in the relation to structure seen in the optical.
[170]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0303116 [pdf] - 55355
The Radio/Mid-Infrared Correlation and the Contribution of 15-micron
Galaxies to the 1.4-GHz Source Counts
Submitted: 2003-03-05
The radio counterparts to the 15-micron sources in the European Large Area
ISO Survey southern fields are identified in 1.4-GHz maps down to about 80
microJy. The radio-MIR correlation is investigated and derived for the first
time at these flux densities for a sample of this size. Our results show that
radio and MIR luminosities correlate almost as well as radio and FIR, at least
up to z ~ 0.6. Using the derived relation and its spread together with the
observed 15-micron counts, we have estimated the expected contribution of the
15-micron extragalactic populations to the radio source counts and the role of
MIR starburst galaxies in the well known 1.4-GHz source excess observed at
sub-mJy levels. Our analysis demonstrates that IR emitting starburst galaxies
do not contribute significantly to the 1.4-GHz counts for strong sources, but
start to become a significant fraction of the radio source population at flux
densities < 0.5 - 0.8 mJy. They are expected to be responsible for more than
60% of the observed radio counts at < 0.05 mJy. These results are in agreement
with the existing results on optical identifications of faint radio sources.
[171]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0302084 [pdf] - 54711
Close stars and an inactive accretion disk in Sgr A*: Eclipses and
flares
Submitted: 2003-02-05, last modified: 2003-02-06
A cold neutral and extremely dim accretion disk may be present as a remnant
of a past vigorous activity around the black hole in our Galactic Center (GC).
Here we discuss ways to detect such a disk through its interaction with
numerous stars present in the central ~0.1 parsec of the Galaxy. The first
major effect expected is X-ray and near infrared (NIR) flares arising when
stars pass through the disk. The second is eclipses of the stars by the disk.
We point out conditions under which the properties of the expected X-ray flares
are similar to those recently discovered by Chandra. Since orbits of bright
stars are now being precisely measured, the combination of the expected flares
and eclipses offers an invaluable tool for constraining the disk density, size,
plane and even direction of rotation. The winds of the O-type stars are
optically thick to free-free absorption in radio frequencies. If present near
Sgr A* core, such powerful stellar winds can modulate and even occult the radio
source.
[172]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0212255 [pdf] - 53645
Proper Motions and CCD-photometry of Stars in the Region of the Open
Cluster NGC 1513
Submitted: 2002-12-11
The results of astrometric and photometric investigations of the poorly
studied open cluster NGC 1513 are presented. The proper motions of 353 stars
with the root-mean-square error of 1.9 mas/yr were obtained by means of the
automated measuring complex "Fantasy" scanning of 8 astrometric plates covering
the time interval of 101 years. A total of 141 astrometric cluster members have
been identified. BV CCD-photometry was made for the stars in a square size 17
arcmin x 17 arcmin centered on cluster. 33 stars with the high reliability were
considered to be cluster members by two criteria. The estimation of NGC 1513
age is 2.54 E+08 years. Tables 2 and 3 are only available in electronic form at
the CDS via anonymous ftp to cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr (130.79.128.5) or via
http://cdsweb.u-strasbg.fr/cgi-bin/qcat?J/A+A/.
[173]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0211473 [pdf] - 53208
Sub-au imaging of water vapour clouds around four Asymptotic Giant
Branch stars
Submitted: 2002-11-21
We present MERLIN maps of the 22-GHz H2O masers around four low-mass
late-type stars (IK Tau U Ori, RT Vir and U Her), made with an angular
resolution of ~ 15 milliarcsec and a velocity resolution of 0.1 km s-1. The H2O
masers are found in thick expanding shells with inner radii ~ 6 to 16 au and
outer radii four times larger. The expansion velocity increases radially
through the H2O maser regions, with logarithmic velocity gradients of 0.5--0.9.
IK Tau and RT Vir have well-filled H2O maser shells with a spatial offset
between the near and far sides of the shell, which suggests that the masers are
distributed in oblate spheroids inclined to the line of sight. U Ori and U Her
have elongated poorly-filled shells with indications that the masers at the
inner edge have been compressed by shocks; these stars also show OH maser
flares. MERLIN resolves individual maser clouds, which have diameters of 2 -- 4
au and filling factors of only ~ 0.01 with respect to the whole H2O maser
shells. The CSE velocity structure gives additional evidence the maser clouds
are density bounded. Masing clouds can be identified over a similar timescale
to their sound crossing time (~2 yr) but not longer. The sizes and observed
lifetimes of these clouds are an order of magnitude smaller than those around
red supergiants, similar to the ratio of low-mass:high-mass stellar masses and
sizes. This suggests that cloud size is determined by stellar properties, not
local physical phenomena in the wind.
[174]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0211312 [pdf] - 53047
Predictions for Cosmological Infrared Surveys from Space with the
Multiband Imaging Photometer for SIRTF (MIPS)
Submitted: 2002-11-13
We make predictions for the cosmological surveys to be conducted by
MIPS/SIRTF at 24, 70 and 160 microns, for the GTO and the legacy programs,
using the latest knowledge of the instrument. In addition to detector and
cirrus confusion noise, we discuss in detail the derivation of the confusion
noise due to extragalactic sources, that depends strongly on the shape of the
source counts at a given wavelength and on the telescope and detector pixel
sizes. We show that it is wise in general to compare the classical photometric
criterion and the so called source density criterion to predict the confusion
levels. We obtain, using the model of Lagache, Dole, & Puget (2002) limiting
fluxes of 50 microJy, 3.2 mJy and 36 mJy at 24, 70 and 160 microns (resp.). We
compute the redshift distributions of the detected sources at each wavelength,
and show that they extend up to z ~ 2.7 at 24 microns and up to z ~ 2.5 at 70
and 160 microns, leading to resolve at most 69, 54 and 24% of the Cosmic
Infrared Background (CIB) at 24, 70 and 160 microns (resp.). We estimate which
galaxy populations will be used to derive the luminosity function evolution
with redshift. We also give the redshift distributions of the unresolved
sources in the FIR range, that dominates the fluctuations of the CIB, and a
predicted power spectrum showing the feasibility of fluctuations (due to
Poissonian & clustered source distributions) measurements. The main conclusion
is that MIPS (and SIRTF in general) cosmological surveys will greatly improve
our understanding of galaxy evolution by giving data with unprecedented
accuracy in the mid and far infrared range.
[175]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0210397 [pdf] - 52435
X-Ray and Optical Observations of XTE J0052-723 a Transient Be/X-Ray
Pulsar in the Small Magellanic Cloud
Submitted: 2002-10-17
On December 27th 2000 during our regular SMC monitoring program with Rossi
X-ray Timing Explorer, strong pulsations were detected with a period of 4.78
seconds. Subsequent slew observations performed on Jan 9th and 13th across the
field of view allowed localisation of the pulsar's position to RA: 0 52 17,
Dec: 72 19 51 (J2000). The outburst continued until Jan 24th, 7 PCA
observations were obtained during this period, yielding a maximum X-ray
luminosity ~10^38 ergs/s. Following calculation of the pulsar position, optical
observations of the RXTE error box were made on Jan 16th 2001 with the 1m
telescope of the South African Astronomical Observatory (SAAO) while the source
was still in X-ray outburst. Candidate Be stars identified from their
photometric colours were subsequently observed with the SAAO 1.9m on Nov 7th
2001 to obtain spectra. Only one of the photometrically identified stars
[MA93]537 showed prominent H$\alpha$ emission, with a double peaked
line-profile (EW= -43.3+/-0.7 A, separation velocity= 200+/-15 km/s) confirming
the presence of a substantial circumstellar disk.
[176]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0208366 [pdf] - 51182
Stability of strange stars (SS) derived from a realistic equation of
state
Submitted: 2002-08-20
A realistic equation of state (EOS) leads to realistic strange stars (ReSS)
which are compact in the mass radius plot, close to the Schwarzchild limiting
line (Dey et al 1998). Many of the observed stars fit in with this kind of
compactness, irrespective of whether they are X-ray pulsars, bursters or soft
$\gamma$ repeaters or even radio pulsars. We point out that a change in the
radius of a star can be small or large, when its mass is increasing and this
depends on the position of a particular star on the mass radius curve. We carry
out a stability analysis against radial oscillations and compare with the EOS
of other strange star (SS) models. We find that the ReSS is stable and an M-R
region can be identified to that effect.
[177]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0208231 [pdf] - 51047
Evidence for chemical evolution in the spectra of high redshift galaxies
Mehlert, D.;
Noll, S.;
Appenzeller, I.;
Saglia, R. P.;
Bender, R.;
Boehm, A.;
Drory, N.;
Fricke, K. J.;
Gabasch, A.;
Heidt, J.;
Hopp, U.;
Jaeger, K.;
Moellenhoff, C.;
Seitz, S.;
Stahl, O.;
Ziegler, B.;
.
Submitted: 2002-08-12
Using a sample of 57 VLT FORS spectra in the redshift range 1.37<z<3.40
(selected mainly from the FORS Deep Field survey) and a comparison sample with
36 IUE spectra of local (z ~ 0) starburst galaxies we derive CIV and SiIV
equivalent width values and estimate metallicities of starburst galaxies as a
function of redshift. Assuming that a calibration of the CIV equivalent widths
in terms of the metallicity based on the local sample of starburst galaxies is
applicable to high-z objects, we find a significant increase of the average
metallicities from about 0.16 Z_sun at the cosmic epoch corresponding to z ~
3.2 to about 0.42 Z_sun at z ~ 2.3. A significant further increase in
metallicity during later epochs cannot be detected in our data. Compared to the
local starburst galaxies our high-redshift objects tend to be overluminous for
a fixed metallicity. Our observational results are in good agreement with
published observational data by other authors and with theoretical predictions
of the cosmic chemical evolution.
[178]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0207027 [pdf] - 50170
How is really decelerating the expansion of SN1993J?
Marcaide, J. M.;
Alberdi, A.;
Perez-Torres, M. A.;
Guirado, J. C.;
Lara, L.;
Ros, E.;
Diamond, P. J.;
Mantovani, F.;
Shapiro, I. I.;
Weiler, K. W.;
Preston, R. A.;
Schilizzi, R. T.;
Sramek, R. A.;
Trigilio, C.;
Van Dyk, S. D.;
Whitney, A. R.;
.
Submitted: 2002-07-01
SN1993J is to date the radio supernova whose evolution has been monitored in
greatest detail and the one which holds best promise for a comprehensive
theoretical-observational analysis. The shell-like radio structure of SN1993J
has expanded in general accord with models of shock excited emission, showing
almost circular symmetry for over 8 years, except for a bright feature at the
south-eastern region of the shell that has been observed at every epoch. The
spectrum of SN1993J has flattened from alpha =-1 to alpha =-0.67 (S_(\nu)
propto nu**(alpha)). The decelerated expansion can be modeled well with a
single slope but apparently better with two slopes. There are also intriguing
hints of structure in the expansion curve. The results by the two VLBI groups
carrying out this research show general agreement, but also some differences. A
comparison of the optical and VLBI results about the details of the
deceleration show some discrepancies.
[179]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0206121 [pdf] - 49752
Tracing the Warm-Hot Intergalactic Medium at Low Redshift: X-ray Forest
Observations Towards H1821+643
Submitted: 2002-06-07
We present a high resolution (R~500) X-ray spectrum of the bright quasar
H1821+643 (z=0.297), obtained in a 470 ksec Chandra observation. We search for
X-ray absorption by highly ionized metal species, OVII and OVIII in particular,
at the redshifts of the six intervening OVI absorption systems known from UV
studies. We detect features with >~2-sigma significance at the predicted OVII
and OVIII wavelengths of one OVI system, at the OVII wavelength of a second,
and at the NeIX wavelength of a third. We find two additional features of
comparable strength (one OVII and one OVIII) within 1000 km/s of OVI redshifts.
The 1-sigma constraints in the two detected OVI systems imply gas overdensities
lower than the values delta>100 expected in virialized systems, suggesting that
the absorption arises in lower density, filamentary structures. At the 2-sigma
level, however, the physical constraints are weak. If we treat our 2-sigma
detections of known OVI systems as real, but assume minimal OVII and OVIII in
the other systems, we estimate [f(OVI)+f(OVII)+f(OVIII)]/f(OVI) = 32 +/- 9 for
the average ratio of all highly ionized oxygen species to OVI. Combined with
estimates of the total column density of OVI absorption per unit redshift, this
ratio implies a total baryon fraction associated with detected OVI absorbers
Omega_b(OVI)~0.03/h_70, a substantial fraction of the baryon density predicted
by BBN, and larger than that in known low redshift components. Because of the
limited S/N of the detections, these results must be treated with caution.
Nonetheless, the combination of the OVI data with these X-ray forest
measurements provides the most direct evidence to date for the pervasive,
moderate density, shock-heated intergalactic medium predicted by leading
cosmological scenarios. (Abridged.)
[180]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0205167 [pdf] - 49241
The spatial distribution of the far-infrared emission in NGC 253
Submitted: 2002-05-13
We study the far-infrared emission properties of the nearby starburst galaxy
NGC 253 based on IRAS maps and an ISOPHOT map at 180 microns. Based on the
analysis of the light profiles, we have been able to identify three main
structural components: an unresolved nuclear component, an exponential disk,
and a kiloparsec scale bar.In addition, we also found a ring structure at the
end of the bar that is particularly conspicuous at 12 microns. The Spectral
Energy Distribution (SED) of each morphological component has been modeled as
thermal dust emission at different temperatures. The unresolved nuclear
component is dominated by cold dust emission (T ~ 50 K), whereas the disk
emission is dominated by very cold dust (T ~ 16 K) plus a contribution from
cold dust (T ~ 55 K). The bar emission corresponds mainly to cold dust (T ~ 23
K) plus a warm component (T ~ 148 K). We detect an extension of the disk
emission due to very cold dust, which contributes a large fraction (94%) of the
total dust mass of the galaxy. The estimated total dust mass is 8.2 +/- 10^7
Msun.
[181]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0205106 [pdf] - 49180
The massive double-lined O-type binary HD 165052
Submitted: 2002-05-07
We present a new optical spectroscopic study of the O-type binary HD 165052
based on high- and intermediate-resolution CCD observations. We re-investigated
the spectral classification of the binary components, obtaining spectral types
of O6.5 V and O7.5 V for the primary and secondary, respectively, finding that
both stars display weak C {\sc iii} $\lambda5696$ emission in their spectra. We
also determined a radial-velocity orbit for HD 165052 with a period of 2.95510
$\pm$ 0.00001 d, and semiamplitudes of 94.8 and 104.7 $\pm$ 0.5 km s$^{-1}$,
resulting in a mass ratio $Q = 0.9$. From a comparison with previous
radial-velocity determinations, we found evidence of apsidal motion in the
system. Several signatures of wind-wind collision, such as phase-locked
variability of the X-ray flux and the Struve-Sahade effect, are also
considered. It was also found that the reddening in the region should be
normal, in contrast with previous determinations.
[182]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0204318 [pdf] - 48863
Survey of the ISM in Early-Type Galaxies. IV. The Hot Dust Component
Submitted: 2002-04-18
We present mid-IR photometric properties for a sample of 28 early-type
galaxies observed at 6.75, 9.63 and 15 um with the ISOCAM instrument on board
the ISO satellite. We find total mid-IR luminosities in the range 3-48x10^8
L_sun. The spectral energy distribution (SED) of the galaxies were derived
using the mid-IR data together with previously published UV, optical and
near-IR data. These SEDs clearly show a mid-IR emission coming from dust heated
at T ~ 260 K. Dust grains properties are inferred from the mid-IR colors. The
masses of the hot dust component are in the range 10-400 M_sun. The
relationship between the masses derived from mid-IR observations and those
derived from visual extinction are discussed. The possible common heating
source for the gas and dust is investigated through the correlations between Ha
and mid-IR luminosities.
[183]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0204306 [pdf] - 48851
XMM-Newton observation of the distant (z=0.6) galaxy cluster RX
J1120.1+4318
Arnaud, M.;
Majerowicz, S.;
Lumb, D.;
Neumann, D. M.;
Aghanim, N.;
Blanchard, A.;
Boer, M.;
Burke, D.;
Collins, C.;
Giard, M.;
Nevalainen, J.;
Nichol, R. C.;
Romer, K.;
Sadat, R.;
.
Submitted: 2002-04-18
We report on a 20 ksec XMM observation of the distant cluster RXJ1120.1+4318,
discovered at z=0.6 in the SHARC survey. The cluster has a regular spherical
morphology, suggesting it is in a relaxed state. The combined fit of the
EPIC/MOS&pn camera gives a cluster mean temperature of kT=5.3\pm0.5 keV with an
iron abundance of 0.47\pm0.19. The temperature profile, measured for the first
time at such a redshift, is consistent with an isothermal atmosphere up to half
the virial radius. The surface brightness profile, measured nearly up to the
virial radius, is well fitted by a beta-model, with beta =0.78[+0.06,-0.04] and
a core radius of thetac = 0.44[+0.06,-0.04] arcmin. We compared the properties
of RXJ1120.1+4318 with the properties of nearby clusters for two cosmological
models: an Einstein - de Sitter Universe and a flat low density Universe with
Omega0=0.3. For both models, the scaled emission measure profile beyond the
core, the gas mass fraction and luminosity are consistent with the expectations
of the self-similar model of cluster formation, although a slightly better
agreement is obtained for a low density Universe. There is no evidence of a
central cooling flow, in spite of the apparent relaxed state of the cluster.
This is consistent with its estimated cooling time, larger than the age of the
Universe at the cluster redshift. The entropy profile shows a flat core with a
central entropy of ~ 140 keV cm^2, remarkably similar to the entropy floor
observed in nearby clusters, and a rising profile beyond typically 0.1 virial
radius. Implications of our results, in terms of non-gravitational physics in
cluster formation, are discussed.
[184]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0203041 [pdf] - 48062
Optical and infrared observations of the supernova SN 1999el
Di Carlo, E.;
Massi, F.;
Valentini, G.;
Di Paola, A.;
D'Alessio, F.;
Brocato, E.;
Guidubaldi, D.;
Dolci, M.;
Pedichini, F.;
Speziali, R.;
Causi, G. Li;
Caratti, A.;
Cappellaro, E.;
Turatto, M.;
Arkharov, A. A.;
Gnedin, Y.;
Larionov, V. M.;
Benetti, S.;
Pastorello, A.;
Aretxaga, I.;
Chavushyan, V.;
Vega, O.;
Danziger, I. J.;
Tornambe', A.;
.
Submitted: 2002-03-04
Optical and near-infrared light curves of the Type IIn supernova 1999el in
NGC 6951 are presented. A period of 220 days (416 days in the near-infrared) is
covered from the first observation obtained a few days before maximum light.
Spectroscopic observations are also discussed. Using as a distance calibrator
the Type Ia SN 2000E, which occurred some months later in the same galaxy, and
fitting a blackbody law to the photometric data we obtain a maximum bolometric
luminosity for SN 1999el of $\sim 10^{44}$ erg s$^{-1}$. In general, the
photometric properties of SN 1999el are very similar to those of SN 1998S, a
bright and well studied Type IIn SN, showing a fast decline in all observed
bands similar to those of Type II-L SNe. The differences with SN 1998S are
analyzed and ascribed to the differences in a pre-existing circumstellar
envelope in which dust was already present at the moment of the SN outburst. We
infer that light echoes may play a possibly significant role in affecting the
observed properties of the light curves, although improved theoretical models
are needed to account for the data. We conclude that mass loss in the
progenitor RG stars is episodic and occurs in an asymmetric way. This implies
that collapsing massive stars appear as normal Type II SN if this occurs far
from major mass loss episodes, whereas they appear as Type IIn SNe if a large
mass loss episode is in progress.
[185]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0202350 [pdf] - 47844
The low-mass young stellar population in Orion OB1
Submitted: 2002-02-19
We present recent results from our ongoing large scale variability survey of
the Orion OB1 Association. In an area of ~ 25 square degrees we have unveiled
new populations of low-mass young stars over a range of environments, and ages
from 1-2 Myr in Ori OB 1b to roughly 10 Myr in Ori OB 1a. There is a lack of
strong Ha emission and near-IR excesses in the young stars of Ori OB 1a,
suggesting that accretion stops and disks dissipate for most solar type stars
in a few Myr, probably caused by of the onset of planet formation. The absence
of dust and gas in Ori OB 1a is consistent with the picture of star formation
as a rapid process, in which molecular clouds dissipate in just a few Myr after
the first stars are born.
[186]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0112224 [pdf] - 46597
Observations and modelling of a large optical flare on AT Microscopii
Submitted: 2001-12-10
Spectroscopic observations covering the wavelength range 3600--4600\AA are
presented for a large flare on the late type M dwarf AT Mic (dM4.5e). A
procedure to estimate the physical parameters of the flaring plasma has been
used which assumes a simplified slab model of the flare based on a comparison
of observed and computed Balmer decrements. With this procedure we have
determined the electron density, electron temperature, optical thickness and
temperature of the underlying source for the impulsive and gradual phases of
the flare. The magnitude and duration of the flare allows us to trace the
physical parameters of the response of the lower atmosphere. In order to check
our derived values we have compared them with other methods. In addition, we
have also applied our procedure to a stellar and a solar flare for which
parameters have been obtained using other techniques.
[187]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0109315 [pdf] - 44814
The cosmic flow in the Local Supercluster: Tracing PSCz tidal influence
through optimized Least Action Principle
Submitted: 2001-09-19
We assess the extent to which the flux-limited PSCz redshift sample is
capable of accounting for the major share of mass concentrations inducing the
external tidal forces affecting the peculiar velocities within the Local
Supercluster (LS). The investigation is based upon a comparison of the ``true''
velocities in 2 large N-body simulations and their reconstruction from
``observation-mimicking'' mock catalogues. The mildly nonlinear ``mock'' LS and
PSCz velocities are analyzed by means of the Least Action Principle technique
in its highly optimized implementation of Nusser & Branchini's Fast Action
Method (FAM). For both model N-body Universes, we conclude that the dipolar and
quadrupolar force field implied by the PSCz galaxy distribution would indeed be
sufficiently representing the full external tidal force field.
[188]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0109044 [pdf] - 44543
Follow-up observations from observatories based in Spain
Submitted: 2001-09-04
We present a review of the follow-up observations carried out from
observatories located in Spain; Calar-Alto, Izanha and Roque de Los Muchachos.
It summarizes the observations carried out by our group for 27 GRBs occurred in
the period 1999-2000, spanning from GRB 990123 to GRB 001007.
[189]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0109009 [pdf] - 44508
Optical observations of the dark Gamma-Ray Burst GRB 000210
Gorosabel, Javier;
Hjorth, Jens;
Pedersen, Holger;
Jensen, Brian L.;
Olsen, Lisbeth F.;
Christensen, Lise;
Mediavilla, Evencio;
Barrena, Rafael;
Fynbo, Johan U.;
Andersen, Michael I.;
Jaunsen, Andreas O.;
Holland, Stephen;
Lund, Niels;
.
Submitted: 2001-09-02
We report on optical observations on GRB 000210 obtained with the 2.56-m
Nordic Optical Telescope and the 1.54-m Danish Telescope starting 12.4 hours
after the gamma-ray event. The content of the X-ray error box determined by the
Chandra satellite is discussed.
[190]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0108249 [pdf] - 44225
Optical spectroscopy of isolated planetary mass objects in the sigma
Orionis cluster
Submitted: 2001-08-14
We have obtained low resolution optical spectra of 15 isolated planetary mass
objects (IPMOs) in the sigma Orionis cluster, and derived spectral types by
comparison with nearby M and L dwarfs. The spectral types are in the range late
M - mid L, in agreement with our expectations based on colors and magnitudes
for bona fide members. Therefore, most of these objects have masses below the
deuterium burning limit. About 2/3 show H(alpha) in emission at our spectral
resolution. From our spectroscopic and photometric data, we infer that three
IPMOs in this sample may be binaries with components of similar masses. These
results confirm that the substellar mass function of the sigma Orionis cluster,
in the form dN/dM, keeps rising in the planetary domain.
[191]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0104012 [pdf] - 41751
The influence of massive stars in the interstellar medium of IC 1613:
the supernova remnant S8 and the nebula S3 associated with a WO star
Submitted: 2001-04-01
We present a detailed kinematical analysis of two selected nebulae in the
Local Group irregular galaxy IC 1613. The nebulae are: S8, the only known
supernova remnant in this galaxy, and S3, a Wolf-Rayet nebula associated with
the only WO star in this galaxy. For S8, we have obtained and analyzed its
radial velocity field, where we found complex profiles which can be fitted by
several velocity components. These profiles also show the presence of high
velocity, low density gas. From this, we have obtained the expansion velocity,
estimated the preshock density and calculated the basic kinematical parameters
of this SNR. We suggest that in S8 we are seing a SNR partially hidden by dust.
This suggestion comes from the fact that the SNR is located between two
superbubbles where a ridge of obscured material unveils the existence of dust.
Moreover, we show that this hypothesis prevails when energetic arguments are
taken into account. In the case of S3, this nebula shows bipolar structure. By
means of its kinematics, we have analyzed its two lobes, the ``waist'', as well
as its relation with the nearest superbubbles. For the first time we are able
to see closed the NW lobe, showing a clover leaf shape. This fact allows a
better quantitative knowledge of the nebula as a whole. Furthermore, we found
evidence of an expansion motion in the NW lobe. In the light of our results, we
can express that these nebulae are the product of very massive stellar
evolution. It is surprising the influence these stars still have in shaping
their surrounding gas, and on the energy liberation towards the interstellar
medium of this galaxy.
[192]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0103468 [pdf] - 41685
Failed optical afterglows
Submitted: 2001-03-28
While all but one Gamma-Ray Bursts observed in the X-ray band showed an X-ray
afterglow, about 60 per cent of them have not been detected in the optical
band. We show that this is not due to adverse observing conditions. We then
investigate the hypothesis that the failure of detecting the optical afterglow
is due to absorption at the source location. We find that this is a marginally
viable interpretation, but only if the X-ray burst and afterglow emission and
the possible optical/UV flash do not destroy the dust responsible for
absorption in the optical band. If dust is efficiently destroyed, we are led to
conclude that bursts with no detected optical afterglow are intrinsically
different.
[193]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0103419 [pdf] - 41636
The effect of stellar activity on the LiI 6708, NaI 5896 and KI 7699 \AA
lines: A comparison with the Pleiades, field stars and the Sun
Submitted: 2001-03-26
An analytical model has been developed to empirically study the effects of
stellar spots and faculae on the observed equivalent widths of Li {\sc i} 6708,
Na {\sc i} 5896 and K {\sc i} 7699 \AA lines (and abundances in the case of
lithium) in late-type stars, taking into account the changes in the observed
magnitudes and colors. Solar spectra corresponding to different active regions
are used as input data and a range of filling factors are applied to simulate
the surfaces of stars with different levels of activity. Detailed comparisons
between predicted and observed photometric colors and equivalent widths are
made for late-type stars of the Pleiades and the field. The observed
dispersions in K {\sc i} and Li {\sc i} equivalent widths for Pleiades stars
can be partially accounted by the simultaneous effects of activity on colors
and the line formation, indicating that the lithium-rotation connection
suggested for ~0.7-0.9 Msun Pleiades stars could be due in part to the stellar
activity. However, under realistic values for the filling factors, only a small
portion of the observed spread could be explained by these effects
[194]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0102061 [pdf] - 40772
A probabilistic formulation for Empirical Population Synthesis: Sampling
methods and tests
Submitted: 2001-02-03
We present a probabilistic formulation of the classical problem of
synthesizing spectral properties of a galaxy using a base of star clusters. The
problem consists of estimating the population vector x, composed by the
contributions of n_star base elements to the integrated spectrum of a galaxy,
and the extinction A_V, given a set of absorption line equivalent widths and
continuum colors. The formalism is applied to the n_star = 12 base defined by
Schmidt etal and subsequently used in several studies. The 13-D parameter space
is explored with a Markov chain Monte Carlo sampling scheme based on the
Metropolis algorithm, which produces a smooth and efficient mapping of the
P(x,A_V) probability distribution.
This version of Empirical Population Synthesis is used to investigate the
ability to recover the detailed history of star-formation and chemical
evolution using this spectral base. This is studied as a function of (1) the
magnitude of the measurement errors and (2) the set of observables used in the
synthesis. Only for extremely high S/N all 12 base proportions can be
accurately recovered, though the observables are very precisely reproduced for
any S/N. Furthermore, the individual mean x components are biased in the sense
that components which carry a large fraction of the light tend to share their
contribution preferably among components of same age. This compensation effect
is linked to noise-induced linear dependences in the base, which very
effectively redistribute the likelihood in x-space. The age distribution,
however, can be satisfactorily recovered for realistic data quality. (abridged)
[195]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0101130 [pdf] - 40268
Cosmic shear surveys
Submitted: 2001-01-09
Gravitational weak shear produced by large-scale structures of the universe
induces a correlated ellipticity distribution of distant galaxies. The
amplitude and evolution with angular scale of the signal depend on cosmological
models and can be inverted in order to constrain the power spectrum and the
cosmological parameters. We present our recent analysis of 50 uncorrelated VLT
fields and the very first constrains on ($\Omega_m,\sigma_8$) and the nature of
primordial fluctuations based on the join analysis of present-day cosmic shear
surveys.
[196]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0012027 [pdf] - 39616
Predicting the peculiar velocities of nearby PSC-z galaxies using the
Least Action Principle
Sharpe, J.;
Rowan-Robinson, M.;
Canavezes, A.;
Saunders, W.;
Branchini, E.;
Efstathiou, G.;
Frenk, C.;
Keeble, O.;
McMahon, R. G.;
Maddox, S.;
Oliver, S. J.;
Sutherland, W.;
Tadros, H.;
White, S. D. M.;
.
Submitted: 2000-12-01, last modified: 2000-12-07
We use the Least Action Principle to predict the peculiar velocities of PSC-z
galaxies inside $cz=2000$\km. Linear theory is used to account for tidal
effects to $cz=15000$\km, and we iterate galaxy positions to account for
redshift distortions. As the Least Action Principle is valid beyond Linear
theory, we can predict reliable peculiar velocities even for very nearby
galaxies (ie $cz \leq 500$\km). These predicted peculiar velocities are then
compared with the observed velocities of 12 galaxies with Cepheid distances.
The combination of the PSC-z galaxy survey (with its large sky coverage and
uniform selection), with the accurate Cepheid distances, makes this comparison
relatively free from systematic effects. We find that galaxies are good tracers
of the mass, even at small ($\leq 10$\mpc) scales; and under the assumption of
no biasing, $0.25 \leq \beta \leq 0.75$ (at 90% confidence). We use the
reliable predicted peculiar velocities to estimate the Hubble constant \ho from
the local volume without ``stepping up'' the distance ladder, finding a
confidence range of 65-75\kmM (at 90% confidence).
[197]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0012154 [pdf] - 39743
Discovery of Five Binary Radio Pulsars
Camilo, F.;
Lyne, A. G.;
Manchester, R. N.;
Bell, J. F.;
Stairs, I. H.;
D'Amico, N.;
Kaspi, V. M.;
Possenti, A.;
Crawford, F.;
McKay, N. P. F.;
.
Submitted: 2000-12-06
We report on five binary pulsars discovered in the Parkes multibeam Galactic
plane survey. All of the pulsars are old, with characteristic ages 1-11 Gyr,
and have relatively small inferred magnetic fields, 5-90e8 G. The orbital
periods range from 1.3 to 15 days. As a group these objects differ from the
usual low-mass binary pulsars (LMBPs): their spin periods of 9-88 ms are
relatively long; their companion masses, 0.2-1.1 Msun, are, in at least some
cases, suggestive of CO or more massive white dwarfs; and some of the orbital
eccentricities, 1e-5 < e < 0.002, are unexpectedly large. We argue that these
observed characteristics reflect binary evolution that is significantly
different from that of LMBPs. We also note that intermediate-mass binary
pulsars apparently have a smaller scale-height than LMBPs.
[198]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0012059 [pdf] - 39648
Terapixel Surveys for Cosmic Shear
Mellier, Y.;
van Waerbeke, L.;
Radovich, M.;
Bertin, E.;
Dantel-Fort, M.;
Cuillandre, J. -C.;
Cracken, H. Mc;
Fevre, O. Le;
Didelon, P.;
Morin, B.;
Maoli, R.;
Erben, T.;
Bernardeau, F.;
Schneider, P.;
Fort, B.;
Jain, B.;
.
Submitted: 2000-12-03
The recent detections of cosmic shear signal announced by several groups have
demonstrated the feasibility of this challenging program and convinced astro-
nomers of its potential for cosmology. Cosmic shear analysis demands to handle
Gigabytes of data in order to probe several square degrees in subarcsecond deep
imaging mode. The success of these surveys is sensitive to the designs of the
observation strategy, the organization of the data reduction pipelines and the
links of the data base with surveys like X-ray or spectroscopic follow up. We
describe the cosmic shear surveys we have carried out at the VLT and at CFHT
and the way we handle this huge data set in a more general context including
the VIRMOS and the XMM-LSS surveys, and the future CMB surveys.
[199]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0011492 [pdf] - 39498
Very Low Mass Stars and Brown Dwarfs of the Young Open Cluster IC2391
Submitted: 2000-11-27
We have identified a large sample of probable low mass members of the young
open cluster IC2391 based on optical (VRIZ) and Infrared (JHK$_s$) photometry.
Our sample includes 50 probable members and 82 possible members, both very low
mass stars and brown dwarfs. We also provide accurate positions for these stars
and brown dwarf candidates derived from red UK Schmidt plates measured using
the microdensitometer SuperCOSMOS. Assuming an age of 53 Myr, we estimate that
we have reached a mass of 0.025 M$_\odot$, if the identified objects are indeed
members of IC2391.
[200]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0010490 [pdf] - 38837
XMM-Newton observation of an unusual iron line in the quasar Markarian
205
Submitted: 2000-10-24
XMM-Newton observations of the low luminosity, radio-quiet quasar Markarian
205 have revealed a unique iron K emission line profile. In marked contrast to
the broad and redshifted iron K line commonly seen in ASCA observations of
Seyfert 1 galaxies, we find that a substantial amount of the line flux in Mrk
205 occurs above the neutral line energy of 6.4 keV. Furthermore, we find that
the iron line emission has two distinct components, a narrow, unresolved
neutral line at 6.4 keV and a broadened line centred at 6.7 keV. We suggest
that the most likely origin of the 6.7 keV line is from X-ray reflection off
the surface of a highly ionised accretion disk, whilst the 6.4 keV component
may arise from neutral matter distant from the black hole, quite possibly in
the putative molecular torus. Overall this observation underlines the potential
of XMM-Newton for using the iron K line as a diagnostic of matter in the
innermost regions of AGN.
[201]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0010483 [pdf] - 38830
Starburst activity in a ROSAT Narrow Emission-Line Galaxy
Gunn, K. F.;
McHardy, I. M.;
Almaini, O.;
Shanks, T.;
Sumner, T. J.;
Muxlow, T. W. B.;
Efstathiou, A.;
Jones, L. R.;
Croom, S. M.;
Manners, J. C.;
Newsam, A. M.;
Mason, K. O.;
Serjeant, S. B. G.;
Rowan-Robinson, M.;
.
Submitted: 2000-10-24
We present multiwaveband photometric and optical spectropolarimetric
observations of the R=15.9 narrow emission line galaxy R117_A which lies on the
edge of the error circle of the ROSAT X-ray source R117 (from McHardy et al
1998). The overall spectral energy distribution of the galaxy is well modelled
by a combination of a normal spiral galaxy and a moderate-strength burst of
star formation. The far infra-red and radio emission is extended along the
major axis of the galaxy, indicating an extended starburst.
On positional grounds, the galaxy is a good candidate for the identification
of R117 and the observed X-ray flux is very close to what would be expected
from a starburst of the observed far infra-red and radio fluxes. Although an
obscured high redshift QSO cannot be entirely ruled out as contributing some
fraction of the X-ray flux, we find no candidates to K=20.8 within the X-ray
errorbox and so conclude that R117_A is responsible for a large fraction, if
not all, of the X-ray emission from R117.
Searches for indicators of an obscured AGN in R117_A have so far proven
negative; deep spectropolarimetric observations show no signs of broad lines to
a limit of one per cent and, for the observed far infra-red and radio emission,
we would expect a ten times greater X-ray flux if the overall emission were
powered by an AGN. We therefore conclude that the X-ray emission from R117 is
dominated by starburst emission from the galaxy R117_A.
[202]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0010044 [pdf] - 38392
A 2.14 ms Candidate Optical Pulsar in SN1987A
Middleditch, J.;
Kristian, J. A.;
Kunkel, W. E.;
Hill, K. M.;
Watson, R. M.;
Luicio, R.;
Imamura, J. N.;
Steiman-Cameron, T. Y.;
Shearer, A.;
Redfern, M.;
Butler, R.;
Danks, A. C.;
.
Submitted: 2000-10-02, last modified: 2000-10-11
We have monitored Supernova 1987A in optical/near-infrared bands from a few
weeks following its birth until the present time in order to search for a
pulsar remnant. We have found an apparent pattern of emission near the
frequency of 467.5 Hz - a 2.14 ms pulsar candidate, first detected in data
taken on the remnant at the Las Campanas Observatory (LCO) 2.5-m Dupont
telescope during 14-16 Feb. 1992 UT. We detected further signals near the 2.14
ms period on numerous occasions over the next four years in data taken with a
variety of telescopes, data systems and detectors, at a number of ground- and
space-based observatories. The sequence of detections of this signal from Feb.
`92 through August `93, prior to its apparent subsequent fading, is highly
improbable (< 1.e-10) for any noise source). We also find evidence for
modulation of the 2.14 ms period with a ~1,000 s period which, when taken with
the high spindown of the source (2-3e-10 Hz/s), is consistent with precession
and spindown via gravitational radiation of a neutron star with a
non-axisymmetric oblateness of ~1e-6, and an implied gravitational luminosity
exceeding that of the Crab Nebula pulsar by an order of magnitude.
[203]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0007188 [pdf] - 37026
The Cold and Hot Gas Content of Fine-Structure E and S0 Galaxies
Submitted: 2000-07-13
We investigate trends of the cold and hot gas content of early-type galaxies
with the presence of optical morphological peculiarities, as measured by the
fine-structure index (Sigma). HI mapping observations from the literature are
used to track the cold-gas content, and archival ROSAT PSPC data are used to
quantify the hot-gas content. We find that E and S0 galaxies with a high
incidence of optical peculiarities are exclusively X-ray underluminous and,
therefore, deficient in hot gas. In contrast, more relaxed galaxies with little
or no signs of optical peculiarities span a wide range of X-ray luminosities.
That is, the X-ray excess anticorrelates with Sigma. There appears to be no
similar trend of cold-gas content with either fine-structure index or X-ray
content. The fact that only apparently relaxed E and S0 galaxies are strong
X-ray emitters is consistent with the hypothesis that after strong disturbances
such as a merger hot-gas halos build up over a time scale of several gigayears.
This is consistent with the expected mass loss from stars.
[204]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0005517 [pdf] - 36288
Exploring the high frequency emission of radio loud X-ray binaries
Submitted: 2000-05-25
We report millimetre-wave continuum observations of the X-ray binaries Cygnus
X-3, SS 433, LSI+61 303, Cygnus X-1 and GRS 1915+105. The observations were
carried out with the IRAM 30 m-antenna at 250 GHz (1.25 mm) from 1998 March 14
to March 20. These millimetre measurements are complemented with centimetre
observations from the Ryle Telescope, at 15 GHz (2.0 cm) and from the Green
Bank Interferometer at 2.25 and 8.3 GHz (13 and 3.6 cm). Both Cygnus X-3 and SS
433 underwent moderate flaring events during our observations, whose main
spectral evolution properties are described and interpreted. A significant
spectral steepening was observed in both sources during the flare decay, that
is likely to be caused by adiabatic expansion, inverse Compton and synchrotron
losses. Finally, we also report 250 GHz upper limits for three additional
undetected X-ray binary stars: LSI+65 010, LSI+61 235 and X Per.
[205]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0005488 [pdf] - 36259
Lopsidedness in dwarf irregular galaxies
Submitted: 2000-05-24
We quantify the amplitude of the lopsidedness, the azimuthal angular
asymmetry index, and the concentration of star forming regions, as represented
by the distribution of the H$\alpha$ emission, in a sample of 78 late-type
irregular galaxies. We bin the observed galaxies in two groups representing
blue compact galaxies (BCDs) and low surface brightness dwarf galaxies (LSBs).
The light distribution is analysed with a novel algorithm, which allows
detection of details in the light distribution pattern.
We find that while the asymmetry of the underlying continuum light,
representing the older stellar generations, is relatively small, the H$\alpha$
emission is very asymmetric and is correlated in position angle with the
continuum light.
We test a model of random star formation over the extent of a galaxy by
simulating HII regions in artificial dwarf galaxies. The implication is that
random star formation over the full extent of a galaxy may be generated in LSB
dwarf-irregular galaxies but not in BCD galaxies.
[206]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0004330 [pdf] - 35689
Discovery of Two High-Magnetic-Field Radio Pulsars
Submitted: 2000-04-24
We report the discovery of two young isolated radio pulsars with very high
inferred magnetic fields. PSR J1119-6127 has period P = 0.407 s, and the
largest period derivative known among radio pulsars, Pdot = 4.0e-12. Under
standard assumptions these parameters imply a characteristic spin-down age of
only tau = 1.6 kyr and a surface dipole magnetic field strength of B = 4.1e13
G. We have measured a stationary period-second-derivative for this pulsar,
resulting in a braking index of n = 2.91+-0.05. We have also observed a glitch
in the rotation of the pulsar, with fractional period change Delta_P/P =
-4.4e-9. Archival radio imaging data suggest the presence of a previously
uncataloged supernova remnant centered on the pulsar. The second pulsar, PSR
J1814-1744, has P = 3.975 s and Pdot = 7.4e-13. These parameters imply tau = 85
kyr, and B = 5.5e13 G, the largest of any known radio pulsar.
Both PSR J1119-6127 and PSR J1814-1744 show apparently normal radio emission
in a regime of magnetic field strength where some models predict that no
emission should occur. Also, PSR J1814-1744 has spin parameters similar to the
anomalous X-ray pulsar (AXP) 1E 2259+586, but shows no discernible X-ray
emission. If AXPs are isolated, high magnetic field neutron stars
(``magnetars''), these results suggest that their unusual attributes are
unlikely to be merely a consequence of their very high inferred magnetic
fields.
[207]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0004287 [pdf] - 35646
The Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment. A Hunt for Caustic
Crossings in QSO 2237+0305
Submitted: 2000-04-20
In 1998 The Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment (OGLE) successfully
implemented automated data reductions for QSO 2237+0305. Using a new image
subtraction method we achieved a differential photometry scatter of 1-5 % for
images A-D respectively. Combined with a time sampling of 1-2 times a week this
is sufficient for early detection of caustic crossings. Nearly real time
photometry of QSO 2237+0305 is available from the OGLE web site
http://www.astro.princeton.edu/~ogle/ogle2/huchra.html . During the 1999
observing season, the apparent V magnitude of the A, B, C and D images changed
by 0.50, 0.15, 0.65 and 0.35 mag, respectively. Most likely however, none of
the microlensing events involved a caustic crossing. The most rapid variation
was 0.25 mag in 30 days, observed for image C. The alert system will continue
to be active in the next observing season from late April until September 2000,
when OGLE suspends operation for an upgrade. Observations will resume for
season of 2001.
[208]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0003287 [pdf] - 35161
The Narrow Line Region of Narrow-Line Seyfert 1 Galaxies
Submitted: 2000-03-20
This work studies the optical emission line properties and physical
conditions of the narrow line region (NLR) of seven narrow-line Seyfert 1
galaxies (NLS1). Our results show that the flux carried out by the narrow
component of H-beta is, on average, 50% of the total line flux. As a result,
the [OIII] 5007/H-beta ratio emitted in the NLR varies from 1 to 5, instead of
the universally adopted value of 10. This has strong implications for the
required spectral energy distribution that ionizes the NLR gas. Photoionization
models that consider a NLR composed of a combination of matter-bounded and
ionization-bounded clouds are successful at explaining the low [OIII]
5007/H-beta ratio and the weakness of low-ionization lines of NLS1s. Variation
of the relative proportion of these two type of clouds nicely reproduce the
dispersion of narrow line ratios found among the NLS1 sample. Assuming similar
physical model parameters of both NLS1s and the normal Seyfert 1 galaxy NGC
5548, we show that the observed differences of emission line ratios between
these two groups can be explained in terms of the shape of the input ionizing
continuum. Narrow emission line ratios of NLS1s are better reproduced by a
steep power-law continuum in the EUV -- soft X-ray region, with spectral index
alpha ~ -2. Flatter spectral indices (alpha ~ -1.5) match the observed line
ratios of NGC 5548 but are unable to provide a good match to the NLS1 ratios.
This result is consistent with ROSAT observations of NLS1s, which show that
these objects are characterized by steeper power-law indices than those of Sy1
galaxies with strong broad optical lines.
[209]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0003224 [pdf] - 35098
The evolution of the stellar populations in low surface brightness
galaxies
Submitted: 2000-03-15
We investigate the star formation history and chemical evolution of low
surface brightness (LSB) disk galaxies by modelling their observed
spectro-photometric and chemical properties using a galactic chemical and
photometric evolution model incorporating a detailed metallicity depen dent set
of stellar input data. For a large fraction of the LSB galaxies in our sample,
observed properties are best explained by models incorporating an exponentially
decreasing global star formation rate (SFR) ending at a present-day gas
fraction (M_{gas}/(M_{gas}+M_{stars}) = 0.5 for a galaxy age of 14 Gyr. For
some galaxies small amplitude star formation bursts are required to explain the
contribution of the young (5-50 Myr old) stellar population to the galaxy
integrated luminosity. This suggests that star formation has proceeded in a
stochastic manner.
The presence of an old stellar population in many late-type LSB galaxies
suggests that LSB galaxies roughly follow the same evolutionary history as HSB
galaxies, except at a much lower rate. In particular, our results imply that
LSB galaxies do not form late, nor have a delayed onset of star formation, but
simply evolve slowly.
[210]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0001265 [pdf] - 34062
Dynamics of the X-ray clusters Abell 222, Abell 223 and Abell 520
Submitted: 2000-01-14
We present the results of a dynamical analysis of three rich, X-ray luminous
galaxy clusters, Abell 222, Abell 223 and Abell 520, that are at intermediate
redshifts. Our study is based on radial velocities for 71 cluster members,
respectively 30 for A222, 20 for A223 and 21 for A520, measured from spectra
obtained at the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope, the European Southern
Observatory, and the Pic du Midi Observatory, and supplemented with radial
velocities from the literature. A222 galaxies have slightly higher velocities
than those of A223, with bi-weighted mean velocity of V_{bi} = 64242 +/- 194
km/s for A222, and of V_{bi} = 63197 +/- 266 km/s for A223. The velocity
dispersions of the two clusters are about the same: sigma_{bi} = 1013 +/- 150
km/s and sigma_{bi} = 1058 +/- 160 km/s for A222 and A223, respectively. For
A520 we obtain V_{bi} = 60127 +/- 284 km/s with sigma_{bi} = 1250 +/- 189 km/s.
We also give mass and mass-luminosities ratio estimates for each cluster
separately. We argue that these clusters are presently undergoing strong
dynamical evolution and that A222 and A223 will probably merge in the future.
We have applied a Principal Component Analysis to a sample of 51 CFHT spectra
to produce a spectral classification for these galaxies. This classification
has allowed us to show that the morphological and kinematical segregations were
already established in these intermediate redshift clusters.
[211]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/0001099 [pdf] - 33896
Biased Estimates of Omega from Comparing Smoothed Predicted Velocity
Fields to Unsmoothed Peculiar Velocity Measurements
Submitted: 2000-01-06
We show that a regression of unsmoothed peculiar velocity measurements
against peculiar velocities predicted from a smoothed galaxy density field
leads to a biased estimate of the cosmological density parameter Omega, even
when galaxies trace the underlying mass distribution and galaxy positions and
velocities are known perfectly. The bias arises because the errors in the
predicted velocities are correlated with the predicted velocities themselves.
We investigate this bias using cosmological N-body simulations and analytic
arguments. In linear perturbation theory, for cold dark matter power spectra
and Gaussian or top hat smoothing filters, the bias in Omega is always
positive, and its magnitude increases with increasing smoothing scale. This
linear calculation reproduces the N-body results for Gaussian smoothing radii
R_s > 10 Mpc/h, while non-linear effects lower the bias on smaller smoothing
scales, and for R_s < 3 Mpc/h Omega is underestimated rather than
overestimated. The net bias in Omega for a given smoothing filter depends on
the underlying cosmological model. The effect on current estimates of Omega
from velocity-velocity comparisons is probably small relative to other
uncertainties, but taking full advantage of the statistical precision of future
peculiar velocity data sets will require either equal smoothing of the
predicted and measured velocity fields or careful accounting for the biases
discussed here.
[212]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/9912264 [pdf] - 109927
No nearby counterparts to the moving objects in the Hubble Deep Field
Submitted: 1999-12-14
Ibata et al (1999) have recently discovered faint, moving objects in the
Hubble Deep Field. The quantity, magnitudes and proper motions of these objects
are consistent with old white dwarfs making up the Galactic dark halo. We
review a number of ground-based proper motion surveys in which nearby dark halo
white dwarfs might be present, if they have the colours and absolute magnitudes
proposed. No such objects have been found, whereas we argue here that several
times more would be expected than in the Hubble Deep Field. We conclude it is
unlikely that hydrogen atmosphere white dwarfs make up a significant fraction
of the halo dark matter. No limits can be placed yet on helium atmosphere
dwarfs from optical searches.
[213]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/9909448 [pdf] - 108484
Blue Horizontal--Branch Stars: The "Jump" in Stromgren u, Low Gravities,
and Radiative Levitation of Metals
Submitted: 1999-09-27
We study the ``jump'' in the blue horizontal--branch (BHB) distribution first
detected by Grundahl et al. (1998) in the Galactic globular cluster (GC) M13.
On the basis of Stromgren photometry for a sample of fourteen GC's we show
that: 1) The jump is best characterized as a systematic shift, on a (u, u-y)
color-magnitude diagram, from canonical zero-age HB (ZAHB) models, in the sense
that the stars appear brighter and/or hotter than the models; 2) the jump is a
ubiquitous phenomenon, ocurring over the temperature range 11,500 < Teff <
20,000K; 3) An analogous feature is present in (log g, log Teff) diagrams --
indicating a common physical origin for the two phenomena; 4) The physical
mechanism responsible for the jump phenomenon is most likely radiative
levitation of iron and other
[214]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/9909447 [pdf] - 108483
Exploring Star Clusters Using Stromgren uvby Photometry
Submitted: 1999-09-27
We illustrate the application of high precision Stromgren uvby photometry to
open and globular clusters (GCs). It is shown how such data can be used to
determine cluster ages, independent of distance and only weakly dependent on
reddening. We also illustrate in detail how c1 index variations point to
significant star-to-star abundance variations of C and N (through variations in
the strength of the 3360AA NH band) on the red giant branches (RGBs) of all
metal-poor GCs observed to date as well as on the main sequences of M71 (NGC
6838) and 47 Tuc (NGC 104).
[215]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/9906389 [pdf] - 107110
GRB Redshift determination in the X-ray band
Submitted: 1999-06-24
If gamma-ray bursts originate in dense stellar forming regions, the
interstellar material can imprint detectable absorption features on the
observed X-ray spectrum. Such features can be detected by existing and planned
X-ray satellites, as long as the X-ray afterglow is observed after a few
minutes from the burst. Detection of these X-ray features will make possible
the determination of the redshift of gamma-ray bursts even when their optical
afterglows are severely dimmed by extinction.
[216]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/9906319 [pdf] - 107040
GRB 990510: linearly polarized radiation from a fireball
Covino, S.;
Lazzati, D.;
Ghisellini, G.;
Saracco, P.;
Campana, S.;
Chincarini, G.;
Di Serego, S.;
Cimatti, A.;
Vanzi, L.;
Pasquini, L.;
Haardt, F.;
Israel, G. L.;
Stella, L.;
Vietri, M.;
.
Submitted: 1999-06-18
Models for gamma-ray burst afterglows envisage an hyper-relativistic fireball
that is decelerated in the ambient medium around the explosion site. This
interaction produces a shock wave which amplifies the magnetic field and
accelerates electrons to relativistic energies, setting the conditions for an
efficient production of synchrotron photons. If produced in a region of
large-scale ordered magnetic field, synchrotron radiation can be highly
polarized. The optical transient associated with GRB 990510 was observed ~18.5
hr after the event and linear polarization in the R band was measured at a
level of 1.7 +/- 0.2 %. This is the first detection of linear polarization in
the optical afterglow of a gamma-ray burst. We exclude that this polarization
is due to dust in the interstellar material, either in our Galaxy or in the
host galaxy of the gamma-ray burst. These results provide important new
evidence in favor of the synchrotron origin of the afterglow emission, and
constrains the geometry of the fireball and/or magnetic field lines.
[217]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/9906208 [pdf] - 106929
Early detection of the optical counterpart to GRB 980329
Submitted: 1999-06-11
We report optical observations of the GRB 980329 error box which represent
the second earliest detection of the GRB 980329 optical transient. We determine
R = 23.7 $\pm$ 0.5 mag on 29.89 March, which is consistent with R = 23.6 $\pm$
0.2 mag as reported by Palazzi et al. (1998) on 29.99 March. Based on
extrapolations of the light curve we claim that the R-band magnitude of the GRB
980329 host galaxy should lie in the range 26.8 mag $<$ R $<$ 29 mag. We also
discuss the similarities with GRB 970111.
[218]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/9906104 [pdf] - 106825
Young galaxies: what turns them on?
Kolatt, Tsafrir S.;
Bullock, James S.;
Somerville, Rachel S.;
Sigad, Yair;
Jonsson, Patrik;
Kravtsov, Andrey V.;
Klypin, Anatoly A.;
Primack, Joel R.;
Faber, Sandra M.;
Dekel, Avishai;
.
Submitted: 1999-06-07
Lyman break galaxies (LBGs) at $z \sim 3$ exhibit number densities and
clustering similar to local $L_*$ galaxies; however, their star formation rates
(SFRs) are much higher. We explore the scenario in which LBGs are starburst
galaxies triggered by collisions, and thus provide an explanation for these key
properties. The relative paucity of starburst galaxies at low redshift can be
attributed to a much higher collision rate in the past. We use high-resolution
cosmological $N$-body simulations and a hierarchical halo finder to estimate
the galaxy collision rate as a function of time in the popular $\Lambda$CDM
cosmological model. We find that bright collisional starbursts are frequent
enough to account for most of the high-$z$ ($2.5-4.5$) LBGs. Moreover, many of
the objects are of relatively small mass, but they cluster about large-mass
halos. They therefore exhibit strong clustering, similar to that observed and
stronger than that of the relevant massive halos.
[219]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/9905370 [pdf] - 106696
Star-to-Star Abundance Variations among Bright Giants in the Mildly
Metal-Poor Globular Cluster M4
Submitted: 1999-05-27
We present a chemical composition analysis of 36 giants in the nearby mildy
metal-poor (<[Fe/H]> = -1.18) "CN-bimodal" globular cluster M4. Confronted with
a cluster that has large and variable interstellar extinction across the
cluster face, we combined traditional spectroscopic abundance methods with
modifications to line-depth ratio techniques to determine the atmospheric
parameters of our stars. We derive a total-to-selective extinction ratio of 3.4
and an average <E(B-V)> reddening of 0.33 which is significantly lower than
that estimated by using the dust maps made by Schlegel et al. (1998).
Abundance ratios for Sc, Ti, V, Ni, & Eu are typical of halo field and
cluster stars. However, Si, Al, Ba, & La are overabundant with respect to what
is seen in other globular clusters of similar metallicity. Superimposed on the
primordial abundance distribution is evidence for the existence of
proton-capture synthesis. We recover some of the C, N, O, Na, Mg, & Al
abundance swings and correlations found in other more metal-poor globular
clusters but the range of variation is muted. The Al enhancements appear to be
from the destruction of 25,26Mg, not 24Mg. The C+N+O abundance sum is constant
to within the observational errors, and agrees with the C+N+O total that might
be expected for M4 stars at birth.
The M4 AGB stars have C,N,O abundances that show less evidence for proton-
capture nucleosynthesis than is found in the less-evolved stars of the RGB.
Deeply-mixed stars of the RGB, subsequent to the helium core flash, might take
up residence on the blue end of the HB, and thus fail to evolve back to the AGB
but reasons for skepticism concerning this scenario are noted.
[220]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/9904329 [pdf] - 106226
The Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment. Monitoring of QSO
2237+0305
Submitted: 1999-04-23, last modified: 1999-04-26
We present results from 2 years of monitoring of Huchra's lens (QSO
2237+0305) with the 1.3 m Warsaw telescope on Las Campanas, Chile. Photometry
in the V band was done using a newly developed method for image subtraction.
Reliable subtraction without Fourier division removes all complexities
associated with the presence of a bright lensing galaxy. With positions of
lensed images adopted from HST measurements it is relatively easy to fit the
variable part of the flux in this system, as opposed to modeling of the
underlying galaxy. For the first time we observed smooth light variation over a
period of a few months, which can be naturally attributed to microlensing. We
also describe automated software capable of real time analysis of the images of
QSO 2237+0305. It is expected that starting from the next observing season in
1999 an alert system will be implemented for high amplification events (HAE) in
this object. Time sampling and photometric accuracy achieved should be
sufficient for early detection of caustic crossings.
[221]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/9809240 [pdf] - 102944
The Reaction Rate Sensitivity of Nucleosynthesis in Type II Supernovae
Submitted: 1998-09-18, last modified: 1999-04-06
We explore the sensitivity of the nucleosynthesis of intermediate mass
elements (28 < A < 80) in supernovae derived from massive stars to the nuclear
reaction rates employed in the model. Two standard sources of reaction rate
data (Woosley et al. 1978; and Thielemann et al. 1987) are employed in pairs of
calculations that are otherwise identical. Both include as a common backbone
the experimental reactions rates of Caughlan & Fowler (1988). Two stellar
models are calculated for each of two main sequence masses: 15 and 25 solar
masses. Each star is evolved from core hydrogen burning to a presupernova state
carrying an appropriately large reaction network, then exploded using a piston
near the edge of the iron core as described by Woosley & Weaver (1995). The
final stellar yields from the models calculated with the two rate sets are
compared and found to differ in most cases by less than a factor of two over
the entire range of nuclei studied. Reasons for the major discrepancies are
discussed in detail along with the physics underlying the two reaction rate
sets employed. The nucleosynthesis results are relatively robust and less
sensitive than might be expected to uncertainties in nuclear reaction rates,
though they are sensitive to the stellar model employed.
[222]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/9810219 [pdf] - 103335
Segregated Optical-NIR colour distributions of MDS galaxies
Submitted: 1998-10-14
We present a K survey of 29 fields covering approximately 90 arcmin^2 from
the Medium Deep Survey (MDS) catalogue down to a completeness magnitude of
K=18.0 (limiting magnitude K=19.0). The morphology obtained by the MDS team
using high resolution images from HST/WFPC2 along with our NIR observations
allow a Colour-Magnitude and Colour-Colour analysis that agrees in general with
spectral evolution models (Bruzual & Charlot 1998) especially if a reasonable
range of metallicities for the Simple Stellar Populations used (0.2 < Z/Zsolar
< 2.5) is considered. However, a significant population of spheroids was found,
which appear bluer than expected, confirming previous observations (Forbes et
al. 1996, Koo et al. 1996, Glazebrook et al. 1998). This blueness might
possibly signal the existence of non-negligible star formation in ellipticals
and bulges at medium redshift. A number counts calculation for different
morphological types show disks become the dominant population at faint
magnitudes. The median redshift of the sample is z~0.2, from a photometric
redshift estimation using V-K and I-K. A search for EROs in the survey field
was also performed, with no detection of objects having I-K > 4.5, setting an
upper limit to the number density of EROs at dn_{EROs}/d\Omega < 0.011
arcmin^{-2} (K < 18.0).
[223]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/9809213 [pdf] - 102917
Structure and kinematics of the peculiar galaxy NGC 128
Submitted: 1998-09-16
This is a multiband photometric and spectroscopic study of the peculiar S0
galaxy NGC128. We present results from broad (B and R) and narrow band optical
CCD photometry, near (NIR) and far (FIR) infrared observations, long slit
spectroscopy, and Fabry-Perot interferometry (CIGALE). The peculiar peanut
shape morphology of the galaxy is observed both at optical and near-infrared
wavelengths. The stellar disk is thick and distorted (arc-bended), with a color
asymmetry along the major axis due to the presence of a large amount of dust,
estimated through NIR and FIR data of ~6x10^6 M_sun, in the region of
interaction with the companion galaxy NGC127. The color maps are nearly uniform
over the whole galaxy, but for the major axis asymmetry, and a small gradient
toward the center indicating the presence of a redder disk-like component. The
H_alpha image indeed reveals the existence of a tilted gaseous ``disk'' around
the center, oriented with the major axis toward the companion galaxy NGC127.
Long slit and CIGALE data confirm the presence of gas in a disk-like component
counter-rotating and inclined approximately of 50 deg. to the line of sight.
The mass of the gas disk in the inner region is ~2.7x10^4 M_sun. The stellar
velocity field is cylindrical up to the last measured points of the derived
rotation curves, while the velocity dispersion profiles are typical for an S0
galaxy, but for an extended constant behaviour along the minor axis.
[224]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/9808060 [pdf] - 102404
Optical Polarization of 52 Radio-Loud QSOs and BL Lac Objects
Submitted: 1998-08-06
Polarization measurements are presented for 52 radio-loud QSOs and BL Lac
objects. For 9 highly polarized (p >3%) AGN, these are the first published
polarization measurements. Of these 9, 7 are highly-polarized QSOs (HPQs), one
is a BL Lac object and another is a likely BL Lac object. Polarization
variability is confirmed for some of these new and previously known
highly-polarized AGN. While 6 of the HPQs have flat radio spectra are almost
certainly blazars, PKS 1452-217 is probably a new member of the rare class of
radio-loud QSOs that show high polarization by scattering, and is therefore
important for testing orientation Unified Schemes. In competition for the
highest redshift HPQ are the well-observed QSO PKS 0438-43 at z = 2.85, with
maximum p = 4.7%, and PKS 0046-315 at z = 2.72, for which we find p = 13%.
[225]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/9804299 [pdf] - 101180
BeppoSax Spectral Survey of soft X-ray selected BL Lacs
Wolter, A.;
Comastri, A.;
Ghisellini, G.;
Giommi, P.;
Guainazzi, M.;
Maccacaro, T.;
Maraschi, L.;
Padovani, P.;
Raiteri, C. M.;
Tagliaferri, G.;
Urry, C. M.;
Villata, M.;
.
Submitted: 1998-04-28
We present X-ray spectra obtained with BeppoSAX (Satellite per Astronomia X)
of 10 BL Lac objects, selected from the Einstein Medium Sensitivity and Slew
Surveys. We find that in about half of the objects a fit in the 0.1-10 keV
range with a single power law and free absorption yields values of NH larger
than the Galactic ones. In most of these cases, however, broken power law fits
with NH fixed at the Galactic values yield an alternative, better description
of the data and indicate a steepening of the spectrum with increasing energy.
One object (1ES1101-232) is detected up to ~100 keV. Its spectral energy
distribution (SED) peaks in the medium energy X-ray band. For each object we
compute the peak frequency of the SED from multifrequency data. The spectral
indices alpha_x in the 2-10 keV band (Fnu prop to nu^{-alpha_x}) are smaller
(i.e. flatter spectrum) for objects with higher peak frequencies. We therefore
confirm and extend to higher energies the behavior already known for X-ray
selected BL Lac objects in the ROSAT band. We do not find spectral indices
smaller than 1; however, the flat distribution of alpha_x and the correlation
between alpha_x and peak frequency found from our data suggest that a number of
objects may exist, which in the quiescent status have flatter spectrum and peak
frequency in the hard X-ray range.
[226]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/9710345 [pdf] - 99104
Distance indicators based on the luminosity-profile shapes of early-type
galaxies--a reply
Submitted: 1997-10-30, last modified: 1998-02-13
In a recent paper, Binggeli & Jerjen (1998) question the value of the extra-
galactic distance indicators presented by Young & Currie (1994 & 1995) and
state that they have refuted `the claim that the Virgo dEs [dwarf-elliptical
galaxies]...are distributed in a prolate structure stretching from 8 to 20 Mpc
distance (Young & Currie 1995).' even though no such claim was ever made.
In this paper, we examine Binggeli & Jerjen's claims that intrinsic scatter
rather than spatial depth must be the main cause of the large scatters observed
in the relevant scaling relationships for Virgo galaxies. We investigate the
accuracy of Binggeli & Jerjen's photometric parameters and find that while
their profile curvature and scalelength measurements are probably useful, their
total magnitude and central surface-brightness measurements are not useful for
the purpose of investigating scaling laws because they suffer from serious
systematic and random errors. We also investigate Binggeli & Jerjen's criti-
cisms of our (1995) analysis. We demonstrate that their test for strong mutual
dependence between distance estimates based on the two different scaling laws
is invalid because of its prior assumption of negligible cluster depth. We
further demonstrate that the [relative] distance estimates on which their
kinematical arguments are based cannot be meaningful, not only because of the
seriousness of the photometric errors, but also because they are undermined by
the prior assumption that depth effects can again be neglected.
[227]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/9712129 [pdf] - 99618
The t system: a new system for estimating the total magnitudes of
galaxies
Submitted: 1997-12-09
We present a new, but simple, procedure for estimating the total magnitudes
of galaxies. This procedure involves the out-focusing of digital galaxy images
numerically, the fitting of the resulting surface-brightness profiles with a
single generalised profile model and the extrapolation of the fitted profiles
to infinite radial distances.
This new system, which we denote `t', differs fundamentally from the `T'
system (of the `Reference Catalog of Bright Galaxies' series) in that: (1) it
enables a galaxy's luminosity profile to be extrapolated without the need for
any prior morphological classification, and (2) it is applicable to images of
widely different spatial resolutions (including unresolved ones) because it
takes into account systematic effects due to differential image resolution.
It also differs fundamentally from the Kron system in that: (1) it can be
derived directly from surface photometry without the need to go back to the
plate scans or CCD frames (unless the surface photometry is of high resolution
and/or the galaxies being measured are very bright), and (2) it can cope with
merged images (provided they are separable by image-segmentation software).
Through worked examples, we demonstrate the stability of `t'-system total
magnitudes with respect to morphological type, the seeing conditions at the
time of observation, degree of smoothing and limiting isophote. We also compare
and contrast the new system with both the `T' system and the Kron system, and
investigate the advantages and limitations of each of the three systems.
[228]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/9711182 [pdf] - 99315
Warps and Secondary Infall
Submitted: 1997-11-17
Secondary infall in galaxies could cause the angular momentum of the outer
halo to change its orientation. The generation of warps due to this effect is
studied using N-body simulations.
[229]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/9709093 [pdf] - 98546
Multicolor photometry of the GRB970508 optical remnant
Submitted: 1997-09-10
We report results of follow-up multicolor photometry of the optical variable
source that is a probable remnant of the gamma-ray burst GRB970508 discovered
by the BeppoSAX satellite (IAUC 6649). Observations were carried out in
Johnson-Kron-Cousins $ BVR_cI_c system with the 1-m and 6-m telescopes of SAO
RAS. Between the 2nd and the 5th day after the burst a fading of the remnant is
well fitted with an exponential law in all four bands. During this period the
`broadband spectrum' of the object was unchanged and can be approximated by a
power-law,
F_{\nu}\propto\nu^{-1.1}. After the 5th day the decline of brightness is
slowed down. In the R_c band until the 32nd day, the light curve can be
described by a power-law relation, F_t \propto t^{-1.2}.
[230]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/9706123 [pdf] - 97644
A search for correlations of TeV gamma-rays with ultra-high energy
cosmic rays
Akerlof, C. W.;
Biller, S.;
Boyle, P.;
Buckley, J.;
Carter-Lewis, D. A.;
Catanese, M.;
Cawley, M. F.;
Connaughton, V.;
Fegan, D. J.;
Finley, J.;
Gaidos, J.;
Hillas, A. M.;
Krennrich, F.;
Lamb, R. C.;
Lessard, R.;
McEnery, J.;
Mohanty, G.;
Porter, N. A.;
Quinn, J.;
Rodgers, A.;
Rose, H. J.;
Samuelson, F.;
Schubnell, M. S.;
Sembroski, G.;
Srinivasan, R.;
Weekes, T. C.;
Zweerink, J.;
.
Submitted: 1997-06-12
A search was conducted for TeV gamma-rays emitted from the direction of the
ultra-high energy cosmic ray detected by the Fly's Eye Experiment with E ~ 3 x
10**20 eV. No enhancement was found at a level of 10**-10 gamma/cm**2-sec for
E>350 GeV. This upper limit is consistent with theoretical estimates based on
topological defects as sources of UHE cosmic rays. An upper limit was also set
for the flux of TeV gamma rays from 3C147, the most prominent AGN in the error
box.
[231]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/9706052 [pdf] - 97573
The LMC transition star R84 and the core of the LH 39 OB association
Submitted: 1997-06-05
On the basis of sub-arcsecond optical imaging we resolve and study the core
components of the LMC OB association LH 39. The central star of the
association, the rare transition object R84, is also investigated using CASPEC
echelle spectroscopy. A new, powerful image restoration code that conserves the
fluxes allows us to obtain the magnitudes and colors of the components. We
bring out some 30 stars in a ~16"x16", area centered on R84. At a resolution of
0.19", the closest components to R84 are shown to lie at 1.1" NW and 1.7" NW
respectively of the transition star. One of these stars is the reddest star of
the field after R84 but turns out to be too faint to correspond to the red M2
supergiant previously reported to contaminate the spectrum of R84. If the
late-type spectrum is due to a line-of-sight supergiant with a luminosity
comparable to R84, it should lie closer than 0.12" to R84. The transition star
shows spectral variability between 1982 and 1991. We also note some slight
radial velocity variations of the Of emission lines over timescales of several
years. Furthermore, we discuss the apparent absence of O type stars in this
association.
[232]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/9702227 [pdf] - 96746
The Durham/UKST Galaxy Redshift Survey -III. Large Scale Structure via
the 2-Point Correlation Function
Submitted: 1997-02-26
We have investigated the statistical clustering properties of galaxies by
calculating the 2-point galaxy correlation function from the Durham/UKST Galaxy
Redshift Survey. This survey is magnitude limited to bj = 17, contains 2500
galaxies sampled at a rate of one in three and surveys a 4 \times 10^6
(h^-1Mpc)^3 volume of space. We have empirically determined the optimal method
of estimating the 2-point correlation function from just such a magnitude
limited survey. Using this method, our correlation function results confirm the
previously claimed detections of large scale power out to 40h^-1 Mpc scales. We
compare with two common models of cosmological structure formation and find
that our 2-point correlation function has power significantly in excess of the
standard cold dark matter model in the 10-30h^-1 Mpc region, supporting the
observational results of the APM galaxy survey.
[233]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/9611029 [pdf] - 1234820
The colour of the Deep ROSAT X-ray sky fluctuations
Submitted: 1996-11-05
We have carried out a fluctuation analysis in four bands (R4, R5, R6 and R7
corresponding to 0.44-1.01 keV, 0.56-1.21 keV, 0.73-1.56 keV and to 1.05-2.04
keV respectively) of two very deep ROSAT PSPC observations in directions where
the galactic H{\small I} column is minimal. This has enabled us to study the
average spectrum of the sources contributing to 0.5-2 keV fluxes $\sim 10^{-15}
\rm \ergpcmsqps$. The best fit spectral energy index for the average faint
source spectrum, $\alpha=0.95^{+0.10}_{-0.15}$, is still steeper than the one
measured for the extragalactic XRB at these energies $\alpha\sim 0.4-0.7$, but
flatter than the typical AGN spectral index $\alpha\sim 1-1.5$. This result has
allowed us to constrain the existence of a population of sources harder than
the AGNs contributing to the source counts at these fluxes. We find that a
population of X-ray sources with energy spectral index $\alpha\sim 0.4-0.6$
would contribute $(30\pm 20)$ per cent to the source counts at these fluxes if
the rest of them are AGNs with energy spectral index $\alpha\sim 1.2$.
[234]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/9610109 [pdf] - 95633
Associated Absorption at Low and High Redshift
Submitted: 1996-10-15
Combining information on absorbing material in AGN from X-ray and the UV
creates a powerful investigative tool. Here we give examples from both low and
high redshift.
[235]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/9608134 [pdf] - 1234740
Evidence for an outflow from the Seyfert galaxy NGC 4051
Submitted: 1996-08-21
New observations using narrow band imaging, long-slit spectroscopy and MERLIN
observations of the nuclear region of the Seyfert galaxy NGC~4051 have been
made. An edge brightened, triangular region of ionized gas extending 420 pc
from the centre of the galaxy has been detected. Long-slit spectra of this
ionised gas, taken at 1.5\arcsec\ from the core, show the \oiii\ emission line
to consist of two velocity components, both blue-shifted from the systemic
radial velocity, with velocity widths of 140\kms\ and separated by 120\kms.
This region is co-spatial with weak extended radio emission and is suggestive
of a centrally driven outflow. The \oiii\ line spectrum and image of this
region have been modelled as an outflowing conical structure at 50\degr\ to the
line of sight with a half opening angle of 23\degr .
In addition to the extended structure, high resolution MERLIN observations of
the 18-cm nuclear radio emission reveal a compact (1\arcsec) radio triple
source in PA 73$^{\circ}$. This source is coincident with the HST-imaged
emission line structure. These high resolution observations are consistent with
a more compact origin of activity (i.e. a Seyfert nucleus) than a starburst
region.
[236]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/9502050 [pdf] - 1234319
Stellar evolution with mass loss - comparison of numerical and
semi-analytical computations.
Submitted: 1995-02-09
We present here results of stellar evolution calculations that include the
latest advances in radiative opacities and neutrino cooling, and discuss on the
basis of these models how the internal stellar structure responds to mass-loss
from the stellar surface. This problem has particular importance for the
development of semi-analytical algorithms for effi cient calculation of
synthetic stellar populations with realistic (and hence complex) mass-loss
scenarios. We therefore compare our numerical results with test calculations
based on a semi-analytical stellar evolution method developed by us. Although
small, but important, differences between results from the two methods are
revealed, the evolutionary tracks in the HR-diagram predicted by the two
approaches are almost identical.
[237]
oai:arXiv.org:hep-ph/9501396 [pdf] - 115728
$\Omega_0 <1$ From Inflation
Submitted: 1995-01-27
An inflationary scenario that leads to $\Omega _0<1$ today is presented. An
epoch of `old' inflation during which the smoothness and horizon problems are
solved is followed by a shortened epoch of `new' inflation. Old inflation exits
through the nucleation of a single bubble, leading to negative spatial
curvature on slices of constant cosmic time. We calculate the spectrum of
density perturbations in such a scenario.
[238]
oai:arXiv.org:astro-ph/9501091 [pdf] - 92287
EXPERIMENTAL LIMITS ON THE DARK MATTER HALO OF THE GALAXY FROM
GRAVITATIONAL MICROLENSING.
Alcock, C.;
Allsman, R. A.;
Axelrod, T. S.;
Bennett, D. P.;
Cook, K. H.;
Freeman, K. C.;
Griest, K.;
Guern, J. A.;
Lehner, M. J.;
Marshall, S. L.;
Park, H. -S.;
Perlmutter, S.;
Peterson, B. A.;
Pratt, M. R.;
Quinn, P. J.;
Rodgers, A. W.;
Stubbs, C. W.;
Sutherland, W.;
.
Submitted: 1995-01-24
We have monitored 8.6 million stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud for 1.1 years
and have found 3 events consistent with gravitational microlensing. We place
strong constraints on the Galactic halo content in the form of compact lensing
objects in the mass range $10^{-4} \msun$ to $10^{-1} \msun$. Three events is
fewer than expected for a standard spherical halo of objects in this mass
range, but appears to exceed the number expected from known Galactic
populations. Fitting a naive spherical halo model to our data yields a MACHO
fraction $f = 0.20^{+0.33}_{-0.14}$, which implies a total MACHO mass (inside
50 kpc) of $8.0^{+14}_{-6}\ten{10} \msun$, and a microlensing optical depth
$9^{+15}_{-7} \ten{-8}$ ($\sim 68$\% CL).