1,576 research outputs found
The Production of HI in Photodissociation Regions and A Comparison with CO(1-0) Emission
The gas at the surfaces of molecular clouds in galaxies is heated and
dissociated by photons from young stars both near and far. HI resulting from
the dissociation of molecular hydrogen H2 emits hyperfine line emission at 21
cm, and warmed CO emits dipole rotational lines such as the 2.6 mm line of
CO(1-0). We use previously developed models for photodissociation regions
(PDRs) to compute the intensities of these HI and CO(1-0) lines as a function
of the total volume density n in the cloud and the far ultraviolet flux G0
incident upon it and present the results in units familiar to observers. The
intensities of these two lines behave differently with changing physical
conditions in the PDR, and, taken together, the two lines can provide a
ground-based radio astronomy diagnostic for determining n and G0 separately in
distant molecular clouds. This diagnostic is particularly useful in the range
Gzero <~ 100, 10 cm^{-3} <~ n <~ 10^5 cm^{-3}, which applies to a large
fraction of the volume of the interstellar medium in galaxies. If the molecular
cloud is located near discrete sources of far-UV (FUV) emission, the
PDR-generated HI and CO(1-0) emission on the cloud surface can be more easily
identified, appearing as layered ``blankets'' or ``blisters'' on the side of
the cloud nearest to the FUV source. As an illustration, we consider the
Galactic object G216 -2.5, i.e. ``Maddalena's Cloud'', which has been
previously identified as a large PDR in the Galaxy. We determine that this
cloud has n ~ 200 cm^{-3}, G0 ~ 0.8, consistent with other data.Comment: 13 Pages, 3 Figures. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
An Attempt to Detect the Galactic Bulge at 12 microns with IRAS
Surface brightness maps at 12 microns, derived from observations with the
Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS), are used to estimate the integrated
flux at this wavelength from the Galactic bulge as a function of galactic
latitude along the minor axis. A simple model was used to remove Galactic disk
emission (e.g. unresolved stars and dust) from the IRAS measurements. The
resulting estimates are compared with predictions for the 12 micron bulge
surface brightness based on observations of complete samples of optically
identified M giants in several minor axis bulge fields. No evidence is found
for any significant component of 12m emission in the bulge other than that
expected from the optically identified M star sample plus normal, lower
luminosity stars. Known large amplitude variables and point sources from the
IRAS catalogue contribute only a small fraction to the total 12 micron flux.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ; 13 pages of text including tables in
MS WORD97 generated postscript; 3 figures in postscript by Sigma Plo
Morphological Properties of PPNs: Mid-IR and HST Imaging Surveys
We will review our mid-infrared and HST imaging surveys of the circumstellar
dust shells of proto-planetary nebulae. While optical imaging indirectly probes
the dust distribution via dust-scattered starlight, mid-IR imaging directly
maps the distribution of warm dust grains. Both imaging surveys revealed
preferencially axisymmetric nature of PPN dust shells, suggesting that
axisymmetry in planetary nebulae sets in by the end of the asymptotic giant
branch phase, most likely by axisymmetric superwind mass loss. Moreover, both
surveys yielded two morphological classes which have one-to-one correspondence
between the two surveys, indicating that the optical depth of circumstellar
dust shells plays an equally important role as the inclination angle in
determining the morphology of the PPN shells.Comment: 6 pages + 8 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the conference,
"Post-AGB Objects (proto-planetary nebulae) as a Phase of Stellar Evolution",
Torun, Poland, July 5-7, 2000, eds. R. Szczerba, R. Tylenda, and S.K. Gorny.
Figures have been degraded to minimize the total file siz
86 GHz SiO maser survey of late-type stars in the Inner Galaxy. IV. SiO emission and infrared data for sources in the Scutum and Sagittarius-Carina arms, 20 deg < l < 50 deg
We present an 86 GHz SiO (v = 1, J = 2 ---> 1) maser search toward late-type
stars located within |b|<0.5 deg and 20 deg < l < 50 deg. This search is an
extension at longer longitudes of a previously published work. We selected 135
stars from the MSX catalog using color and flux criteria and detected 92 (86
new detections). The detection rate is 68%, the same as in our previous study.
The last few decades have seen the publication of several catalogs of point
sources detected in infrared surveys (MSX, 2MASS, DENIS, ISOGAL, WISE, GLIMPSE,
AKARI, and MIPSGAL). We searched each catalog for data on the 444 targets of
our earlier survey and for the 135 in the survey reported here. We confirm
that, as anticipated, most of our targets have colors typical of oxygen-rich
asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars. Only one target star may have already left
the AGB. Ten stars have colors typical of carbon-rich stars, meaning a
contamination of our sample with carbon stars <=1.7%.Comment: 13 pages, 6 Figures, A&A accepte
The Tip of the Red Giant Branch and Distance of the Magellanic Clouds: results from the DENIS survey
We present a precise determination of the apparent magnitude of the tip of
the red giant branch (TRGB) in the I (0.8 micron), J (1.25 micron), and K_S
(2.15 micron) bands from the luminosity function of a sample of data extracted
from the DENIS catalogue towards the Magellanic Clouds (Cioni et al. 2000).
From the J and Ks magnitudes we derive bolometric magnitudes m_bol. We
present a new algorithm for the determination of the TRGB magnitude, which we
describe in detail and test extensively using Monte-Carlo simulations. We note
that any method that searches for a peak in the first derivative (used by most
authors) or the second derivative (used by us) of the observed luminosity
function does not yield an unbiased estimate for the actual magnitude of the
TRGB discontinuity. We stress the importance of correcting for this bias, which
is not generally done. We combine the results of our algorithm with theoretical
predictions to derive the distance modulus of the Magellanic Clouds. We obtain
m-M = 18.55 (0.04 formal, 0.08 systematic) for the Large Magellanic Cloud
(LMC), and m-M = 18.99 (0.03 formal, 0.08 systematic) for the Small Magellanic
Cloud (SMC). These are among the most accurate determinations of these
quantities currently available, which is a direct consequence of the large size
of our sample and the insensitivity of near infrared observations to dust
extinction.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures, revised version, accepted for publication in A&
Dusty winds II. Observational Implications
We compare observations of AGB stars and predictions of the Elitzur & Ivezic
(2001) steady-state radiatively driven dusty wind model. The model results are
described by a set of similarity functions of a single independent variable,
and imply general scaling relations among the system parameters. We find that
the model properly reproduces various correlations among the observed
quantities and demonstrate that dust drift through the gas has a major impact
on the structure of most winds. From data for nearby oxygen-rich and
carbon-rich mass-losing stars we find that (1) the dispersion in grain
properties within each group is rather small; (2) both the dust cross-section
per gas particle and the dust-to-gas mass ratio are similar for the two samples
even though the stellar atmospheres and grain properties are very different;
(3) the dust abundance in both outflows is significantly below the Galactic
average, indicating that most of the Galactic dust is not stardust - contrary
to popular belief, but in support of Draine (2009). Our model results can be
easily applied to recent massive data sets, such as the Spitzer SAGE survey of
the Large Magellanic Cloud, and incorporated in galaxy evolution models.Comment: 11 pages, 12 figure
Exciting Maser Science with New Instruments - the Promise of the EVLA
In the near future, the Expanded Very Large Array (EVLA) will allow surveys
for maser sources with unprecedented sensitivity, spectral coverage and
spectroscopic capabilities. In particular, comprehensive surveys for many maser
species with simultaneous sensitive continuum imaging and absorption studies
will give a comprehensive radio picture of star formation in the Galactic plane
and elsewhere. Very efficient EVLA surveys for H2O megamasers in Active Galacic
Nuclei will be possible to practically arbitrary redshifts.
EVLA and Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) studies of H2O and SiO masers
will serve as high resolution probes of the innermost envelopes of oxygen-rich
evolved stars and HCN masers of carbon-rich stars.
Farther in the future, the Square Kilometer Array (SKA) promises the
detection of OH gigamasers at all conceivable redshifts and maser astrometry
with unprecedented accuracy.Comment: 10 pages, incl. 4 figures, iaus.cls, to appear the Procedings of IAU
Symp. 242 (Astrophysical masers and their environments) eds. J. Chapman & W.
Baan Replaced version with a few typos correcte
Incidence and survival of remnant disks around main-sequence stars
We present photometric ISO 60 and 170um measurements, complemented by some
IRAS data at 60um, of a sample of 84 nearby main-sequence stars of spectral
class A, F, G and K in order to determine the incidence of dust disks around
such main-sequence stars. Of the stars younger than 400 Myr one in two has a
disk; for the older stars this is true for only one in ten. We conclude that
most stars arrive on the main sequence surrounded by a disk; this disk then
decays in about 400 Myr. Because (i) the dust particles disappear and must be
replenished on a much shorter time scale and (ii) the collision of
planetesimals is a good source of new dust, we suggest that the rapid decay of
the disks is caused by the destruction and escape of planetesimals. We suggest
that the dissipation of the disk is related to the heavy bombardment phase in
our Solar System. Whether all stars arrive on the main sequence surrounded by a
disk cannot be established: some very young stars do not have a disk. And not
all stars destroy their disk in a similar way: some stars as old as the Sun
still have significant disks.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures, Astron & Astrophys. in pres
Formation of Narrow Dust Rings in Circumstellar Debris Disks
Narrow dust rings observed around some young stars (e.g., HR 4796A) need to
be confined. We present a possible explanation for the formation and
confinement of such rings in optically thin circumstellar disks, without
invoking shepherding planets. If an enhancement of dust grains (e.g., due to a
catastrophic collision) occurs somewhere in the disk, photoelectric emission
from the grains can heat the gas to temperatures well above that of the dust.
The gas orbits with super(sub)-Keplerian speeds inward (outward) of the
associated pressure maximum. This tends to concentrate the grains into a narrow
region. The rise in dust density leads to further heating and a stronger
concentration of grains. A narrow dust ring forms as a result of this
instability. We show that this mechanism not only operates around early-type
stars that have high UV fluxes, but also around stars with spectral types as
late as K. This implies that this process is generic and may have occurred
during the lifetime of each circumstellar disk. We examine the stringent
upper-limit on the H2 column density in the HR 4796A disk and find it to be
compatible with the presence of a significant amount of hydrogen gas in the
disk. We also compute the OI and CII infrared line fluxes expected from various
debris disks and show that these will be easily detectable by the upcoming
Herschel mission. Herschel will be instrumental in detecting and characterizing
gas in these disks.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ; 14 pages, 7 figure
CO in OH/IR stars close to the Galactic centre
Aims: A pilot project has been carried out to measure circumstellar CO
emission from three OH/IR stars close to the Galactic centre. The intention was
to find out whether it would be possible to conduct a large-scale survey for
mass-loss rates using, for example, the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA).
Such a survey would increase our understanding of the evolution of the Galactic
bulge.
Methods: Two millimetre-wave instruments were used: the Nobeyama Millimeter
Array at 115 GHz and the Submillimeter Array at 230 GHz. An interferometer is
necessary as a `spatial filter' in this region of space because of the
confusion with interstellar CO emission.
Results: Towards two of the stars, CO emission was detected with positions
and radial velocities coinciding within the statistical errors with the
corresponding data of the associated OH sources. However, for one of the stars
the line profile is not what one expects for an unresolved expanding
circumstellar envelope. We believe that this CO envelope is partially resolved
and that this star therefore is a foreground star not belonging to the bulge.
Conclusions: The results of the observations have shown that it is possible
to detect line profiles of circumstellar CO from late-type stars both within
and in the direction of the Galactic bulge. ALMA will be able to detect CO
emission in short integrations with sensitivity sufficient to estimate
mass-loss rates from a large number of such stars.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
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