129 research outputs found

    Extreme CO Isotopic Abundances in the ULIRG IRAS 13120-5453: An Extremely Young Starburst or Top-Heavy Initial Mass Function

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    We present ALMA 12^{12}CO (J=1-0, 3-2 and 6-5), 13^{13}CO (J=1-0) and C18^{18}O (J=1-0) observations of the local Ultra Luminous Infrared Galaxy, IRAS 13120-5453 (dubbed "The Yo-yo"). The morphologies of the three isotopic species differ, where 13^{13}CO shows a hole in emission towards the center. We measure integrated brightness temperature line ratios of 12^{12}CO/13^{13}CO \geq 60 (exceeding 200) and 13^{13}CO/C18^{18}O \leq 1 in the central region. Assuming optical thin emission, C18^{18}O is more abundant than 13^{13}CO in several regions. The abundances within the central 500 pc are consistent with enrichment of the ISM via a young starburst (<<7Myr), a top-heavy initial mass function or a combination of both.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ

    Near infrared spectroscopy of the type IIn SN 2010jl: evidence for high velocity ejecta

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    The Type IIn supernova SN 2010jl was relatively nearby and luminous, allowing detailed studies of the near-infrared (NIR) emission. We present 1 - 2.4 micron spectroscopy over the age range of 36 - 565 days from the earliest detection of the supernova. On day 36, the H lines show an unresolved narrow emission component along with a symmetric broad component that can be modeled as the result of electron scattering by a thermal distribution of electrons. Over the next hundreds of days, the broad components of the H lines shift to the blue by 700 km/s, as is also observed in optical lines. The narrow lines do not show a shift, indicating they originate in a different region. He I 1.0830 and 2.0587 micron lines both show an asymmetric broad emission component, with a shoulder on the blue side that varies in prominence and velocity from -5500 km/s on day 108 to -4000 km/s on day 219. This component may be associated with the higher velocity flow indicated by X-ray observations of the supernova. The absence of the feature in the H lines suggests that this is from a He rich ejecta flow. The He I 1.0830 micron feature has a narrow P Cygni line, with absorption extending to ~100 km/s and strengthening over the first 200 days, and an emission component which weakens with time. At day 403, the continuum emission becomes dominated by a blackbody spectrum with a temperature of ~1900 K, suggestive of dust emission.Comment: 17 pages, 18 figure

    Global Properties of Neutral Hydrogen in Compact Groups

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    Compact groups of galaxies provide a unique environment to study the evolution of galaxies amid frequent gravitational encounters. These nearby groups have conditions similar to those in the earlier universe when galaxies were assembled and give us the opportunity to witness hierarchical formation in progress. To understand how the compact group environment affects galaxy evolution, we examine the gas and dust in these groups. We present new single-dish GBT neutral hydrogen (HI) observations of 30 compact groups and define a new way to quantify the group HI content as the HI-to-stellar mass ratio of the group as a whole. We compare the HI content with mid-IR indicators of star formation and optical [g-r] color to search for correlations between group gas content and star formation activity of individual group members. Quiescent galaxies tend to live in HI-poor groups, and galaxies with active star formation are more commonly found in HI-rich groups. Intriguingly, we also find "rogue" galaxies whose star formation does not correlate with group HI content. In particular, we identify three galaxies (NGC 2968 in RSCG 34, KUG 1131+202A in RSCG 42, and NGC 4613 in RSCG 64) whose mid-IR activity is discrepant with the HI. We speculate that this mismatch between mid-IR activity and HI content is a consequence of strong interactions in this environment that can strip HI from galaxies and abruptly affect star-formation. Ultimately, characterizing how and on what timescales the gas is processed in compact groups will help us understand the interstellar medium in complex, dense environments similar to the earlier Universe.Comment: Accepted to A

    Complex Radio Spectral Energy Distributions in Luminous and Ultraluminous Infrared Galaxies

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    We use the Expanded Very Large Array to image radio continuum emission from local luminous and ultraluminous infrared galaxies (LIRGs and ULIRGs) in 1 GHz windows centered at 4.7, 7.2, 29, and 36 GHz. This allows us to probe the integrated radio spectral energy distribution (SED) of the most energetic galaxies in the local universe. The 4-8 GHz flux densities agree well with previous measurements. They yield spectral indices \alpha \approx -0.67 (where F_\nu \propto \nu^\alpha) with \pm 0.15 (1\sigma) scatter, typical of nonthermal (synchrotron) emission from star-forming galaxies. The contrast of our 4-8 GHz data with literature 1.5 and 8.4 GHz flux densities gives further evidence for curvature of the radio SED of U/LIRGs. The SED appears flatter near \sim 1 GHz than near \sim 6 GHz, suggesting significant optical depth effects at the lower frequencies. The high frequency (28-37 GHz) flux densities are low compared to extrapolations from the 4-8 GHz data. We confirm and extend to higher frequency a previously observed deficit of high frequency radio emission for luminous starburst galaxies.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in the EVLA Special Issue of ApJ Letter

    The BAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey -- XVIII. Searching for Supermassive Black Hole Binaries in the X-rays

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    Theory predicts that a supermassive black hole binary (SMBHB) could be observed as a luminous active galactic nucleus (AGN) that periodically varies on the order of its orbital timescale. In X-rays, periodic variations could be caused by mechanisms including relativistic Doppler boosting and shocks. Here we present the first systematic search for periodic AGNs using 941941 hard X-ray light curves (14-195 keV) from the first 105 months of the Swift Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) survey (2004-2013). We do not find evidence for periodic AGNs in Swift-BAT, including the previously reported SMBHB candidate MCG+11-11-032. We find that the null detection is consistent with the combination of the upper-limit binary population in AGNs in our adopted model, their expected periodic variability amplitudes, and the BAT survey characteristics. We have also investigated the detectability of SMBHBs against normal AGN X-ray variability in the context of the eROSITA survey. Under our assumptions of a binary population and the periodic signals they produce which have long periods of hundreds of days, up to 1313% true periodic binaries can be robustly distinguished from normal variable AGNs with the ideal uniform sampling. However, we demonstrate that realistic eROSITA sampling is likely to be insensitive to long-period binaries because longer observing gaps reduce their detectability. In contrast, large observing gaps do not diminish the prospect of detecting binaries of short, few-day periods, as 19% can be successfully recovered, the vast majority of which can be identified by the first half of the survey.Comment: 17 pages, including 8 figures and 4 tables. Accepted for publication in Ap

    The frequency of dwarf galaxy multiples at low redshift in SDSS versus cosmological expectations

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    We quantify the frequency of companions of low-redshift (0.013 55 arcsec, projected separations r_p 1:4) steadily increases with decreasing Primary stellar mass, whereas the cosmological “Major Merger rate” (per Gyr) has the opposite behaviour. We conclude that cosmological simulations can be reliably used to constrain the fraction of dwarf mergers across cosmic time

    Measuring Star-formation Rate and Far-Infrared Color in High-redshift Galaxies Using the CO (7-6) and [NII] 205 micron Lines

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    To better characterize the global star formation (SF) activity in a galaxy, one needs to know not only the star formation rate (SFR) but also the rest-frame, far-infrared (FIR) color (e.g., the 60-to-100 μ\mum color, C(60/100)C(60/100)] of the dust emission. The latter probes the average intensity of the dust heating radiation field and scales statistically with the effective SFR surface density in star-forming galaxies including (ultra-)luminous infrared galaxies [(U)LIRGs]. To this end, we exploit here a new spectroscopic approach involving only two emission lines: CO\,(7-6) at 372 μ\mum and [NII] at 205 μ\mum. For local (U)LIRGs, the ratios of the CO (7-6) luminosity (LCO(76)L_{\rm CO\,(7-6)}) to the total infrared luminosity (LIRL_{\rm IR}; 8-1000 μ\mum) are fairly tightly distributed (to within \sim0.12 dex) and show little dependence on C(60/100)C(60/100). This makes LCO(76)L_{\rm CO\,(7-6)} a good SFR tracer, which is less contaminated by active galactic nuclei (AGN) than LIRL_{\rm IR} and may also be much less sensitive to metallicity than LCO(10)L_{\rm CO\,(1-0)}. Furthermore, the logarithmic [NII] 205 μ\mum to CO (7-6) luminosity ratio is fairly steeply (at a slope of \sim1.4-1.4) correlated with C(60/100)C(60/100), with a modest scatter (\sim0.23 dex). This makes it a useful estimator on C(60/100)C(60/100) with an implied uncertainty of \sim0.15 [or \lesssim4 K in the dust temperature (TdustT_{\rm dust}) in the case of a graybody emission with Tdust30T_{\rm dust} \gtrsim 30 K and a dust emissivity index β1\beta \ge 1]. Our locally calibrated SFR and C(60/100)C(60/100) estimators are shown to be consistent with the published data of (U)LIRGs of zz up to \sim6.5.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, 1 table; accepted for publication in the ApJ Lette
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