6,079 research outputs found
A catalog of Kazarian galaxies
The entire Kazarian galaxies (KG) catalog is presented which combines
extensive new measurements of their optical parameters with a literature and
database search. The measurements were made using images extracted from the
STScI Digitized Sky Survey (DSS) of Jpg(blue), Fpg(red) and Ipg(NIR) band
photographic sky survey plates obtained by the Palomar and UK Schmidt
telescopes. We provide accurate coordinates, morphological type, spectral and
activity classes, blue apparent diameters, axial ratios, position angles, red,
blue and NIR apparent magnitudes, as well as counts of neighboring objects in a
circle of radius 50 kpc from centers of KG. Special attention was paid to the
individual descriptions of the galaxies in the original Kazarian lists, which
clarified many cases of misidentifications of the objects, particularly among
interacting systems. The total number of individual Kazarian objects in the
database is now 706. We also include the redshifts which are now available for
404 galaxies and the 2MASS infrared magnitudes for 598 KG. The database also
includes extensive notes, which summarize information about the membership of
KG in different systems of galaxies, and about revised activity classes and
redshifts. An atlas of several interesting subclasses of KG is also presented.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, 1 table, Accepted in Astrophysics, Vol. 53, No.
1, 2010 (English translation of Astrofizika
On the fairness of the main galaxy sample of SDSS
Flux-limited and volume-limited galaxy samples are constructed from SDSS data
releases DR4, DR6 and DR7 for statistical analysis. The two-point correlation
functions , monopole of three-point correlation functions ,
projected two-point correlation function and pairwise velocity dispersion
are measured to test if galaxy samples are fair for these
statistics. We find that with increment of sky coverage of SDSS, of
flux-limited sample is extremely robust and insensitive to local structures at
low redshift. But for volume-limited samples fainter than at large scales
s>\sim 10\hmpc, deviation of and of DR7 to those of DR4
and DR6 increases with larger absolute magnitude. In the weakly nonlinear
regime, there is no agreement between of different data releases in
all luminosity bins. Furthermore, of volume-limited samples of DR7 in
luminosity bins fainter than are significantly larger,
and of the two faintest volume-limited samples of DR7 display
very different scale dependence than results of DR4 and DR6. Our findings call
for cautions in understanding clustering analysis results of SDSS faint galaxy
samples, and higher order statistics of SDSS volume-limited samples in the
weakly nonlinear regime. The first zero-crossing points of of
volume-limited samples are also investigated and discussed.Comment: 16 pages, 12 figures, accepte
Precise absolute astrometry from the VLBA imaging and polarimetry survey at 5 GHz
We present in this paper accurate positions of 857 sources derived from the
astrometric analysis of 16 eleven-hour experiments from the Very Long Baseline
Array imaging and polarimetry survey at 5 GHz (VIPS). Among observed sources,
positions of 430 objects were not determined before at a milliarcsecond level
of accuracy. For 95% of the sources the uncertainty of their positions range
from 0.3 to 0.9 mas, with the median value of 0.5 mas. This estimate of
accuracy is substantiated by the comparison of positions of 386 sources that
were previously observed in astrometric programs simultaneously at 2.3/8.6 GHz.
Surprisingly, the ionosphere contribution to group delay was adequately modeled
with the use of the total electron contents maps derived from GPS observations
and only marginally affected estimates of source coordinates.Comment: Accepted for publication by the Astronomical Journal. 7 pages, 2
tables, 4 figures. Submission contains an ascii file with the catalogue. You
can get the catalogue by downloading the source of this paper and extracting
file table2.tx
Photometric observations of selected, optically bright quasars for Space Interferometry Mission and other future celestial reference frames
Photometric observations of 235 extragalactic objects that are potential
targets for the Space Interferometry Mission (SIM) are presented. Mean B, V, R,
I magnitudes at the 5% level are obtained at 1 - 4 epochs between 2005 and 2007
using the 1-m telescopes at Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory and Naval
Observatory Flagstaff Station. Of the 134 sources which have V magnitudes in
the Veron & Veron-Cetty catalog a difference of over 1.0 mag is found for the
observed-catalog magnitudes for about 36% of the common sources, and 10 sources
show over 3 mag difference. Our first set of observations presented here form
the basis of a long-term photometric variability study of the selected
reference frame sources to assist in mission target selection and to support in
general QSO multi-color photometric variability studies.Comment: 40 pages, 13 figures, 4 table
The Presence of Weak Active Galactic Nuclei in High Redshift Star Forming Galaxies
We present [OIII 5007A] observations of the star forming galaxy HDF-BMZ1299
(z=1.598) using Keck Observatory's Adaptive Optics system with the
near-infrared integral field spectrograph OSIRIS. Using previous Halpha and
[NII] measurements of the same source, we are able for the first time to use
spatially resolved observations to place a high-redshift galaxy's substructure
on a traditional HII diagnostic diagram. We find that HDF-BMZ1299's spatially
concentrated nebular ratios in the central ~1.5 kiloparsec (0."2) are best
explained by the presence of an AGN: log([NII]/Halpha)=-0.22+/-0.05 and 2sigma
limit of log([OIII]/Hbeta)>0.26. The dominant energy source of this galaxy is
star formation, and integrating a single aperture across the galaxy yields
nebular ratios that are composite spectra from both AGN and HII regions. The
presence of an embedded AGN in HDF-BMZ1299 may suggest a potential
contamination in a fraction of other high-redshift star forming galaxies, and
we suggest that this may be a source of the "elevated" nebular ratios
previously seen in seeing-limited metallicity studies. HDF-BMZ1299's estimated
AGN luminosity is L_Halpha = 3.7e41 erg/s and L_[OIII] = 5.8e41 erg/s, making
it one of the lowest luminosity AGN discovered at this early epoch.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, ApJ Accepted, new version to be published
(updated text, figures, and table
Measuring large-scale structure with quasars in narrow-band filter surveys
We show that a large-area imaging survey using narrow-band filters could
detect quasars in sufficiently high number densities, and with more than
sufficient accuracy in their photometric redshifts, to turn them into suitable
tracers of large-scale structure. If a narrow-band optical survey can detect
objects as faint as i=23, it could reach volumetric number densities as high as
10^{-4} h^3 Mpc^{-3} (comoving) at z~1.5 . Such a catalog would lead to
precision measurements of the power spectrum up to z~3-4. We also show that it
is possible to employ quasars to measure baryon acoustic oscillations at high
redshifts, where the uncertainties from redshift distortions and nonlinearities
are much smaller than at z<1. As a concrete example we study the future impact
of J-PAS, which is a narrow-band imaging survey in the optical over 1/5 of the
unobscured sky with 42 filters of ~100 A full-width at half-maximum. We show
that J-PAS will be able to take advantage of the broad emission lines of
quasars to deliver excellent photometric redshifts, \sigma_{z}~0.002(1+z), for
millions of objects.Comment: Matches version published in MNRAS (2012
The Large Quasar Reference Frame (LQRF) - an optical representation of the ICRS
The large number and all-sky distribution of quasars from different surveys,
along with their presence in large, deep astrometric catalogs,enables the
building of an optical materialization of the ICRS following its defining
principles. Namely: that it is kinematically non-rotating with respect to the
ensemble of distant extragalactic objects; aligned with the mean equator and
dynamical equinox of J2000; and realized by a list of adopted coordinates of
extragalatic sources. Starting from the updated and presumably complete LQAC
list of QSOs, the initial optical positions of those quasars are found in the
USNO B1.0 and GSC2.3 catalogs, and from the SDSS DR5. The initial positions are
next placed onto UCAC2-based reference frames, following by an alignment with
the ICRF, to which were added the most precise sources from the VLBA calibrator
list and the VLA calibrator list - when reliable optical counterparts exist.
Finally, the LQRF axes are inspected through spherical harmonics, contemplating
to define right ascension, declination and magnitude terms. The LQRF contains
J2000 referred equatorial coordinates for 100,165 quasars, well represented
across the sky, from -83.5 to +88.5 degrees in declination, and with 10 arcmin
being the average distance between adjacent elements. The global alignment with
the ICRF is 1.5 mas, and the individual position accuracies are represented by
a Poisson distribution that peaks at 139 mas in right ascension and 130 mas in
declination. It is complemented by redshift and photometry information from the
LQAC. The LQRF is designed to be an astrometric frame, but it is also the basis
for the GAIA mission initial quasars' list, and can be used as a test bench for
quasars' space distribution and luminosity function studies.Comment: 23 pages, 23 figures, 6 tables Accepted for publication by Astronomy
& Astrophysics, on 25 May 200
A Wide Field Survey of Satellite Galaxies around the Spiral Galaxy M106
We present a wide field survey of satellite galaxies in M106 (NGC 4258)
covering a 1.7\degr \times 2\degr field around M106 using
Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope/MegaCam. We find 16 satellite galaxy candidates
of M106.
Eight of these galaxies are found to be dwarf galaxies that are much smaller
and fainter than the remaining galaxies. Four of these galaxies are new
findings. Surface brightness profiles of 15 out of 16 satellite galaxies can be
represented well by an exponential disk profile with varying scale length. We
derive the surface number density distribution of these satellite galaxies. The
central number density profile (d kpc) is well fitted by a power-law
with a power index of , similar to the expected power index of
isothermal distribution. The luminosity function of these satellites is
represented well by the Schechter function with a faint end slope of
. Integrated photometric properties (total luminosity,
total colour, and disk scale length) and the spatial distribution of these
satellite galaxies are found to be roughly similar to those of the Milky Way
and M31.Comment: Accepted by MNRA
Type IIn Supernova SN 2010jl: Optical Observations for Over 500 Days After Explosion
We present extensive optical observations of a Type IIn supernova (SN) 2010jl
for the first 1.5 years after the discovery. The UBVRI light curves
demonstrated an interesting two-stage evolution during the nebular phase, which
almost flatten out after about 90 days from the optical maximum. SN 2010jl has
one of the highest intrinsic H_alpha luminosity ever recorded for a SN IIn,
especially at late phase, suggesting a strong interaction of SN ejecta with the
dense circumstellar material (CSM) ejected by the progenitor. This is also
indicated by the remarkably strong Balmer lines persisting in the optical
spectra. One interesting spectral evolution about SN 2010jl is the appearance
of asymmetry of the Balmer lines. These lines can be well decomposed into a
narrow component and an intermediate-width component. The intermediate-width
component showed a steady increase in both strength and blueshift with time
until t ~ 400 days after maximum, but it became less blueshifted at t ~ 500
days when the line profile appeared relatively symmetric again. Owing to that a
pure reddening effect will lead to a sudden decline of the light curves and a
progressive blueshift of the spectral lines, we therefore propose that the
asymmetric profiles of H lines seen in SN 2010jl is unlikely due to the
extinction by newly formed dust inside the ejecta, contrary to the explanation
by some early studies. Based on a simple CSM-interaction model, we speculate
that the progenitor of SN 2010jl may suffer a gigantic mass loss (~ 30-50
M_sun) in a few decades before explosion. Considering a slow moving stellar
wind (e.g., ~ 28 km/s) inferred for the preexisting, dense CSM shell and the
extremely high mass-loss rate (1-2 M_sun per yr), we suggest that the
progenitor of SN 2010jl might have experienced a red supergiant stage and
explode finally as a post-red supergiant star with an initial mass above 30-40
M_sun.Comment: 34 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in A
Stochastic accumulation of feature information in perception and memory
It is now well established that the time course of perceptual processing influences the first second or so of performance in a wide variety of cognitive tasks. Over the last20 years, there has been a shift from modeling the speed at which a display is processed, to modeling the speed at which different features of the display are perceived and formalizing how this perceptual information is used in decision making. The first of these models(Lamberts, 1995) was implemented to fit the time course of performance in a speeded perceptual categorization task and assumed a simple stochastic accumulation of feature information. Subsequently, similar approaches have been used to model performance in a range of cognitive tasks including identification, absolute identification, perceptual matching, recognition, visual search, and word processing, again assuming a simple stochastic accumulation of feature information from both the stimulus and representations held in memory. These models are typically fit to data from signal-to-respond experiments whereby the effects of stimulus exposure duration on performance are examined, but response times (RTs) and RT distributions have also been modeled. In this article, we review this approach and explore the insights it has provided about the interplay between perceptual processing, memory retrieval, and decision making in a variety of tasks. In so doing, we highlight how such approaches can continue to usefully contribute to our understanding of cognition
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