364 research outputs found
Near-infrared reddening of extra-galactic GMCs in a face-on geometry
[Abridged] We describe the near-infrared reddening signature of giant
molecular clouds (GMCs) in external galaxies. In particular, we examine the
E(J-H) and E(H-K) color-excesses, and the effective extinction law observed in
discrete GMC regions. We also study the effect of the relative scale height of
the GMC distribution to the color-excesses, and to the observed mass function
of GMCs. We perform Monte Carlo radiative transfer simulations with 3D models
of stellar radiation and clumpy dust distributions, resembling a face-on
geometry. The scattered light is included in the models, and near-infrared
color maps are calculated from the simulated data. The effective near-infrared
reddening law, i.e. the ratio E(J-H)/E(H-K), has a value close to unity in GMC
regions. The ratio depends on the relative scale height of GMCs, xi, and for xi
values 0.1...0.75 we find the typical ratios of 0.6...1.1. The effective
extinction law turns out to be very flat in GMC regions. We find the ratios of
apparent extinctions of A(H)/A(K)=1.35...1.55 and A(J)/A(H)=1.15. The effect of
the scattered flux on the effective reddening law, as well as on the effective
extinction law, is significant. Regarding the GMC mass function, we find no
correlation between the input and observed slopes of the mass functions.
Rather, the observed slope reflects the parameter and the dynamical range
of the mass function. We estimate that only a fraction of 10...20 % of the
total mass of GMCs is recovered, if the observed color-excess values are
transformed to masses using the Galactic reddening law. In the case of
individual clouds the fraction can vary between ~0...50 %.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in A&A. Added missing
histograms in Fig.
Evidence for Correlated Titanium and Deuterium Depletion in the Galactic ISM
Current measurements indicate that the deuterium abundance in diffuse
interstellar gas varies spatially by a factor of ~4 among sightlines extending
beyond the Local Bubble. One plausible explanation for the scatter is the
variable depletion of D onto dust grains. To test this scenario, we have
obtained high signal-to-noise, high resolution profiles of the refractory ion
TiII along seven Galactic sightlines with D/H ranging from 0.65 to 2.1x10^-5.
These measurements, acquired with the recently upgraded Keck/HIRES
spectrometer, indicate a correlation between Ti/H and D/H at the >95% c.l.
Therefore, our observations support the interpretation that D/H scatter is
associated with differential depletion. We note, however, that Ti/H values
taken from the literature do not uniformly show the correlation. Finally, we
identify significant component-to-component variations in the depletion levels
among individual sightlines and discuss complications arising from this
behavior.Comment: 4 pages; Accepted to Astrophysical Journal Letter
Extraplanar H II Regions in Spiral Galaxies. I. Low-Metallicity Gas Accreting through the Disk-Halo Interface of NGC 4013
The interstellar thick disks of galaxies serve as the interface between the
thin star-forming disk, where feedback-driven outflows originate, and the
distant halo, the repository for accreted gas. We present optical emission line
spectroscopy of a luminous thick disk H II region located at pc above
the plane of the spiral galaxy NGC 4013 taken with the Multi-Object Double
Spectrograph on the Large Binocular Telescope. This nebula, with an H
luminosity times that of the Orion nebula, surrounds a luminous
cluster of young, hot stars that ionize the surrounding interstellar gas of the
thick disk, providing a measure of the properties of that gas. We demonstrate
that strong emission line methods can provide accurate measures of relative
abundances between pairs of H II regions. From our emission line spectroscopy,
we show that the metal content of the thick disk H II region is a factor of
lower than gas in H II regions at the midplane of this galaxy (with
the relative abundance of O in the thick disk lower by dex).
This implies incomplete mixing of material in the thick disk on small scales
(100s of parsecs) and that there is accretion of low-metallicity gas through
the thick disks of spirals. The inclusion of low-metallicity gas this close to
the plane of NGC 4013 is reminiscent of the recently-proposed "fountain-driven"
accretion models.Comment: Astrophysical Journal, 856, 166; 16 pages. V2 includes journal
reference, very minor wording adjustments for consistenc
Strongly Variable z=1.48 FeII and MgII Absorption in the Spectra of z=4.05 GRB 060206
We report on the discovery of strongly variable FeII and MgII absorption
lines seen at z=1.48 in the spectra of the z=4.05 GRB 060206 obtained between
4.13 to 7.63 hours (observer frame) after the burst. In particular, the FeII
line equivalent width (EW) decayed rapidly from 1.72+-0.25 AA to 0.28+-0.21 AA,
only to increase to 0.96+-0.21 AA in a later date spectrum. The MgII doublet
shows even more complicated evolution: the weaker line of the doublet drops
from 2.05+-0.25 AA to 0.92+-0.32 AA, but then more than doubles to 2.47+-0.41
AA in later data. The ratio of the EWs for the MgII doublet is also variable,
being closer to 1:1 (saturated regime) when the lines are stronger and becoming
closer to 2:1 (unsaturated regime) when the lines are weaker, consistent with
expectations based on atomic physics. We have investigated and rejected the
possibility of any instrumental or atmospheric effects causing the observed
strong variations. Our discovery of clearly variable intervening FeII and MgII
lines lends very strong support to their scenario, in which the characteristic
size of intervening patches of MgII ``clouds'' is comparable to the GRB beam
size, i.e, about 10^16 cm. We discuss various implications of this discovery,
including the nature of the MgII absorbers, the physics of GRBs, and
measurements of chemical abundances from GRB and quasar absorption lines.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, 1 table; ApJ Letters, accepte
The UCSD Radio-Selected Quasar Survey for Damped Lyman alpha System
As large optical quasar surveys for damped Lya become a reality and the study
of star forming gas in the early Universe achieves statistical robustness, it
is now vital to identify and quantify the sources of systematic error. Because
the nature of optically-selected quasar surveys makes them vulnerable to dust
obscuration, we have undertaken a radio-selected quasar survey for damped Lya
systems to address this bias. We present the definition and results of this
survey. We then combine our sample with the CORALS dataset to investigate the
HI column density distribution function f(N) of damped Lya systems toward
radio-selected quasars. We find that f(N) is well fit by a power-law f(N) = k_1
N^alpha_1, with log k_1 = 22.90 and alpha_1 = -2.18. This power-law is in
excellent agreement with that of optically-selected samples at low N(HI), an
important yet expected result given that obscuration should have negligible
effect at these gas columns. However, because of the relatively small size of
the radio-selected sample, 26 damped Lya systems in 119 quasars, f(N) is not
well constrained at large N(HI) and the first moment of the HI distribution
function, Omega_g, is, strictly speaking, a lower limit. The power-law is steep
enough, however, that extrapolating it to higher column densities implies only
a modest, logarithmic increase in Omega_g. The radio-selected value of Omega_g
= 1.15 x 10^-3, agrees well with the results of optically-selected surveys.
While our results indicate that dust obscuration is likely not a major issue
for surveys of damped Lya systems, we estimate that a radio-selected sample of
approximately 100 damped Lya systems will be required to obtain the precision
necessary to absolutely confirm an absence of dust bias.Comment: 12 pages, 9 Figures. Accepted to ApJ April 11, 200
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