618 research outputs found
Seyfert Galaxies in the Local Universe: Analysis of Spitzer Spectra of a Complete Sample
The Spitzer high resolution spectra of 72 Seyfert galaxies from the 12m
Galaxy Sample are presented and discussed. The presence of starburst components
in these galaxies can be quantified by powerful mid-IR diagnostics tools (i.e.
11.25m PAH feature equivalent width and the H emission line
intensity), as well as the AGN dominance can be measured by specific fine
structure line ratios (e.g. [NeV]/[NeII], [NeV]/[SiII], etc.). The two types of
Seyfert galaxies do not show any statistical difference in our diagnostic
tools. However, the Seyfert 2's showing hidden Broad Line Regions in
spectro-polarimetric observations have on average an higher AGN dominance, a
weaker star formation component and a warmer [60 - 25] spectral index than
those without broad emission lines.Comment: Proceedings of the Conference "The central kiloparsec. Active
Galactic Nuclei and their hosts, 4-6 June 2008, Ierapetra, Crete, Greec
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High-J CO line emission from young stellar objects: from ISO to FIRST
we present the CO pure rotational spectrum at high J (Jup14) obtained with the Long Wavelength Spectrometer (LWS) on board of the ISO satellite towards molecular outflows exciting sources in nearby star formation regions. The physical conditions, derived using an LVG model for the line emission, indicate the presence of warm and dense gas, probably shock excited. The model fits show that often the bulk of this CO emission is expected in the spectral range that will be covered by FIRST, indicating the potentiality of this satellite to trace the warm component of gas emission in young stellar objects
Heating of the molecular gas in the massive outflow of the local ultraluminous-infrared and radio-loud galaxy 4C12.50
We present a comparison of the molecular gas properties in the outflow vs. in
the ambient medium of the local prototype radio-loud and ultraluminous-infrared
galaxy 4C12.50 (IRAS13451+1232), using new data from the IRAM Plateau de Bure
interferometer and 30m telescope, and the Herschel space telescope. Previous
H_2 (0-0) S(1) and S(2) observations with the Spitzer space telescope had
indicated that the warm (~400K) molecular gas in 4C12.50 is made up of a
1.4(+-0.2)x10^8 M_sun ambient reservoir and a 5.2(+-1.7)x10^7 M_sun outflow.
The new CO(1-0) data cube indicates that the corresponding cold (25K) H_2 gas
mass is 1.0(+-0.1)x10^10 M_sun for the ambient medium and <1.3x10^8 M_sun for
the outflow, when using a CO-intensity-to-H_2-mass conversion factor alpha of
0.8 M_sun /(K km/s pc^2). The combined mass outflow rate is high, 230-800
M_sun/yr, but the amount of gas that could escape the galaxy is low. A
potential inflow of gas from a 3.3(+-0.3)x10^8 M_sun tidal tail could moderate
any mass loss. The mass ratio of warm-to-cold molecular gas is >= 30 times
higher in the outflow than in the ambient medium, indicating that a
non-negligible fraction of the accelerated gas is heated to temperatures at
which star formation is inefficient. This conclusion is robust against the use
of different alpha factor values, and/or different warm gas tracers (H_2 vs.
H_2 plus CO): with the CO-probed gas mass being at least 40 times lower at 400K
than at 25K, the total warm-to-cold mass ratio is always lower in the ambient
gas than in the entrained gas. Heating of the molecular gas could facilitate
the detection of new outflows in distant galaxies by enhancing their emission
in intermediate rotational number CO lines.Comment: A&A, in pres
The selective effect of environment on the atomic and molecular gas-to-dust ratio of nearby galaxies in the Herschel Reference Survey
We combine dust, atomic (HI) and molecular (H) hydrogen mass
measurements for 176 galaxies in the Herschel Reference Survey to investigate
the effect of environment on the gas-to-dust mass ()
ratio of nearby galaxies. We find that, at fixed stellar mass, the average
ratio varies by no more than a factor of 2
when moving from field to cluster galaxies, with Virgo galaxies being slightly
more dust rich (per unit of gas) than isolated systems. Remarkably, once the
molecular and atomic hydrogen phases are investigated separately, we find that
\hi-deficient galaxies have at the same time lower
ratio but higher ratio than \hi-normal systems. In
other words, they are poorer in atomic but richer in molecular hydrogen if
normalized to their dust content. By comparing our findings with the
predictions of theoretical models, we show that the opposite behavior observed
in the and ratios is
fully consistent with outside-in stripping of the interstellar medium (ISM),
and is simply a consequence of the different distribution of dust, \hi\ and
H across the disk. Our results demonstrate that the small environmental
variations in the total ratio, as well as in the
gas-phase metallicity, do not automatically imply that environmental mechanisms
are not able to affect the dust and metal content of the ISM in galaxies.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA
The bolometric and UV attenuation in normal spiral galaxies of the Herschel Reference Survey
The dust in nearby galaxies absorbs a fraction of the
UV-optical-near-infrared radiation produced by stars. This energy is
consequently re-emitted in the infrared. We investigate the portion of the
stellar radiation absorbed by spiral galaxies from the HRS by modelling their
UV-to-submillimetre spectral energy distributions. Our models provide an
attenuated and intrinsic SED from which we find that on average 32 % of all
starlight is absorbed by dust. We define the UV heating fraction as the
percentage of dust luminosity that comes from absorbed UV photons and find that
this is 56 %, on average. This percentage varies with morphological type, with
later types having significantly higher UV heating fractions. We find a strong
correlation between the UV heating fraction and specific star formation rate
and provide a power-law fit. Our models allow us to revisit the IRX-AFUV
relations, and derive these quantities directly within a self-consistent
framework. We calibrate this relation for different bins of NUV-r colour and
provide simple relations to relate these parameters. We investigated the
robustness of our method and we conclude that the derived parameters are
reliable within the uncertainties which are inherent to the adopted SED model.
This calls for a deeper investigation on how well extinction and attenuation
can be determined through panchromatic SED modelling.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Towards understanding the relation between the gas and the attenuation in galaxies at kpc scales
[abridged]
Aims. The aim of the present paper is to provide new and more detailed
relations at the kpc scale between the gas surface density and the face-on
optical depth directly calibrated on galaxies, in order to compute the
attenuation not only for semi-analytic models but also observationally as new
and upcoming radio observatories are able to trace gas ever farther in the
Universe.
Methods. We have selected a sample of 4 nearby resolved galaxies and a sample
of 27 unresolved galaxies from the Herschel Reference Survey and the Very
Nearby Galaxies Survey, for which we have a large set of multi-wavelength data
from the FUV to the FIR including metallicity gradients for resolved galaxies,
along with radio HI and CO observations. For each pixel in resolved galaxies
and for each galaxy in the unresolved sample, we compute the face-on optical
depth from the attenuation determined with the CIGALE SED fitting code and an
assumed geometry. We determine the gas surface density from HI and CO
observations with a metallicity-dependent XCO factor.
Results. We provide new, simple to use, relations to determine the face-on
optical depth from the gas surface density, taking the metallicity into
account, which proves to be crucial for a proper estimate. The method used to
determine the gas surface density or the face-on optical depth has little
impact on the relations except for galaxies that have an inclination over 50d.
Finally, we provide detailed instructions on how to compute the attenuation
practically from the gas surface density taking into account possible
information on the metallicity.
Conclusions. Examination of the influence of these new relations on simulated
FUV and IR luminosity functions shows a clear impact compared to older oft-used
relations, which in turn could affect the conclusions drawn from studies based
on large scale cosmological simulations.Comment: 24 pages, 21 figures, accepted for publication in A&
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Strong H<sub>2</sub>O and high-<i>J</i> CO emission towards the Class 0 protostar L1448-mm
The spectrum of the Class 0 source L1448-mm has been measured over the wavelength range extending from 6 to 190 μm with the Long Wavelength Spectrometer (LWS) and the Short Wavelength Spectrometer (SWS) on the Infrared Space Observatory (ISO). The far infrared spectrum is dominated by strong emission from gaseous H2O and from CO transitions with rotational quantum numbers J ≥ 14; in addition, the H2 pure rotational lines S(3), S(4) and S(5), the OH fundamental line at 119 μm, as well as emission from [O I]63 μm and [C II] 158 μm are also observed. The strong CO and water emission can be consistently explained as originating in a warm gas component at T ~ 700-1400 K and nH2~(3-50) 104cm-3 , which fills about 0.2-2% of the ~ 75" LWS field of view (corresponding, assuming a single emitting region, to a physical size of about (3-12)" or (0.5-2) 10-2 pc at d = 300 pc). We derive an H2O/CO abundance ratio ~ 5, which, assuming a standard CO/H2 abundance of 10-4, corresponds to H2O/H2 ~ 5 10-4. This value implies that water is enhanced by about a factor ~ 103 with respect to its expected abundance in the ambient gas. This is consistent with models of warm shocked regions which predict that most of the free atomic oxygen will be rapidly converted into water once the temperature of the post-shocked gas exceeds ~ 300 K. The relatively high density and compact size inferred for this emission may suggest an origin in the shocked region along the molecular jet traced by SiO and EHV CO millimeter line emission. Further support is given by the fact that the observed enhancement in H2O can be explained by shock conditions similar to those expected to produce the abundant SiO observed in the region. L1448-mm shows the largest water abundance so far observed by ISO amongst young sources displaying outflow activity; we argue that the occurrence of multiple shocks over a relatively short interval of time, like that evidenced in the surroundings of L1448-mm, could have contributed to enrich the molecular jet with a high H2O column density
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