870 research outputs found
Spectrophotometery of Brackett lines in very luminous IRAS galaxies
Observation of the Brackett-alpha and Brackett-gamma hydrogen recombination lines were made in a sample of galaxies chosen from the IRAS catalog to have high luminosities at infrared wavelengths. Most have strong Brackett line emission indicating large numbers of high mass stars; the formation of these stars may hence be the underlying source for the galaxies' luminosities. However, there are at least two exceptions that may not be explained in this manner: NGC 6240 and Arp 220. Additional evidence indicates that each of these exceptions may be more closely related to Seyfert-type galaxies or other active galactic nuclei
Luminosity Function of the Perigalactocentric Region
We present H and K photometry of 42,000 stars in an area of 250 arcmin
centered on the Galactic center. We use the photometry to construct a
dereddened K band luminosity function (LF) for this region, excluding the
excessively crowded inner 2' of the Galaxy. This LF is intermediate between the
LF of Baade's window and the LF of inner 2' of the Galactic center. We
speculate that the bright stars in this region have an age which is
intermediate between the starburst population in the Galactic center and the
old bulge population. We present the coordinates and mags for 16 stars with
K_{0} < 5 for spectroscopic follow up.Comment: 25 pages. Tarred, gzipped and uuencoded. Includes LaTex source file,
Figures 3 to 9 and 5 Tables. Figures 1 and 2 are available at
ftp://bessel.mps.ohio-state.edu/pub/vijay . Submitted to Ap
Metallicity of Red Giants in the Galactic Bulge from Near-Infrared Spectroscopy
We present K-band spectra of more than 110 M giants in Galactic bulge fields
interior to -4 degrees and as close as 0.2 degrees of the Galactic Center. From
the equivalent widths of three features in these spectra, EW(Na),EW(Ca), and
EW(CO) we calculate [Fe/H] for the stars with a calibration derived from
globular clusters Stephens et al (2000). The mean [Fe/H] for each field is in
good agreement with the results from Frogel et al. (1999) based on the slope of
the giant branch method. We find no evidence for a metallicity gradient along
the minor or major axes of the inner bulge (R < 0.6 kpc). A metallicity
gradient along the minor axis, found earlier, arises when fields located at
larger galactic radius are included. However, these more distant fields are
located outside of the infrared bulge defined by the COBE/DIRBE observations.
We compute the [Fe/H] distribution for the inner bulge and find a mean value of
-0.21 dex with a full width dispersion of 0.30 dex, close to the values found
for Baade's Window (BW) by Sadler et al. (1996) and to a theoretical prediction
for a bulge formed by dissipative collapse Molla et al (2000).Comment: 32 pages, 10 figures, AJ submitte
The Optical/Near-IR Colors of Broad Absorption Line Quasars, Including the Candidate Radio-Loud BAL Quasar 1556+3517
A candidate radio-loud broad absorption line quasar (RLBAL) has been reported
by Becker et al. (1997). We present JHK observations of this object and three
other radio-detected BALs taken with the new Michigan-Dartmouth-MIT/Ohio
State/Aladdin IR Camera (MOSAIC) on the KPNO 4-meter. The candidate RLBAL
1556+3517 has B-K=6.63, redder than all but one or two known z>1 quasars. This
strongly suggests the observed continuum of this quasar is reddened by dust.
Even when this extreme reddening is taken into account 1556+3517 is still
probably radio-loud, although near-IR spectroscopy to measure its Balmer
decrement will be needed to verify this. In addition, since it is a
flat-spectrum object, VLBI observations to determine the extent (if any) to
which beaming affects our estimate of its radio luminosity will be needed
before 1556+3517 can be unequivocally declared a radio-loud BAL. We also use
our data and data from the literature to show that optically selected BALs as a
class have B-K colors consistent with the observed distribution for optically
selected quasars as a whole. Thus there is currently no evidence that the
tendency of optically selected BALs to be preferentially radio-intermediate
(Hooper, Francis, & Impey 1993) is due to extinction artificially lowering
estimated BAL optical luminosities. However, as most quasar surveys, both radio
and optical, would be insensitive to a population of reddened radio-quiet BALs,
the existence of a large population of reddened BALs similar to 1556+3517
cannot yet be ruled out.Comment: Accepted to ApJ Letters; 10 pages including 1 figure and 2 tables.
This version somewhat revised from initial submission, with a better figur
RETROCAM: A Versatile Optical Imager for Synoptic Studies
We present RETROCAM, an auxiliary CCD camera that can be rapidly inserted
into the optical beam of the MDM 2.4m telescope. The speed and ease of
reconfiguring the telescope to use the imager and a straightforward user
interface permit the camera to be used during the course of other observing
programs. This in turn encourages RETROCAM's use for a variety of monitoring
projects.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, Accepted by A
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