1,143 research outputs found
Westerbork HI observations of high-velocity clouds near M31 and M33
We have undertaken high-resolution follow-up of a sample of high velocity HI
clouds apparently associated with M31. Our sample was chosen from the
population of high-velocity clouds (HVCs) detected out to 50 kpc projected
radius of the Andromeda Galaxy by Thilker et al. (2004) with the Green Bank
Telescope. Nine pointings were observed with the Westerbork Synthesis Radio
Telescope to determine the physical parameters of these objects and to find
clues to their origin. One additional pointing was directed at a similar object
near M33. At 2' resolution we detect 16 individual HVCs around M31 and 1 HVC
near M33 with typical HI masses of a few times 10^5 solar masses and sizes of
the order of 1 kpc. Estimates of the dynamical and virial masses of some of the
HVCs indicate that they are likely gravitationally dominated by additional mass
components such as dark matter or ionised gas. Twelve of the clouds are
concentrated in an area of only 1 by 1 degree at a projected separation of less
than 15 kpc from the disk of M31. This HVC complex has a rather complicated
morphological and kinematical structure and partly overlaps with the giant
stellar stream of M31, suggesting a tidal origin. Another detected feature is
in close proximity, in both position and velocity, with NGC 205, perhaps also
indicative of tidal processes. Other HVCs in our survey are isolated and might
represent primordial, dark-matter dominated clouds.Comment: 18 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Head-Tail Clouds: Drops to Probe the Diffuse Galactic Halo
A head-tail high-velocity cloud (HVC) is a neutral hydrogen halo cloud that
appears to be interacting with the diffuse halo medium as evident by its
compressed head trailed by a relatively diffuse tail. This paper presents a
sample of 116 head-tail HVCs across the southern sky (d < 2 deg) from the HI
Parkes All Sky Survey (HIPASS) HVC catalog, which has a spatial resolution of
15.5 arcmin (45 pc at 10 kpc) and a sensitivity of N_HI=2 x 10^(18) cm^(-2) (5
sigma). 35% of the HIPASS compact and semi-compact HVCs (CHVCs and :HVCs) can
be classified as head-tail clouds from their morphology. The clouds have
typical masses of 730 M_sun at 10 kpc (26,000 M_sun at 60 kpc) and the majority
can be associated with larger HVC complexes given their spatial and kinematic
proximity. This proximity, together with their similar properties to CHVCs and
:HVCs without head-tail structure, indicate the head-tail clouds have short
lifetimes, consistent with simulation predictions. Approximately half of the
head-tail clouds can be associated with the Magellanic System, with the
majority in the region of the Leading Arm with position angles pointing in the
general direction of the movement of the Magellanic System. The abundance in
the Leading Arm region is consistent with this feature being closer to the
Galactic disk than the Magellanic Stream and moving through a denser halo
medium. The head-tail clouds will feed the multi-phase halo medium rather than
the Galactic disk directly and provide additional evidence for a diffuse
Galactic halo medium extending to at least the distance of the Magellanic
Clouds.Comment: MNRAS Accepted, 10 figures, 7 in colo
Ongoing Galactic Accretion: Simulations and Observations of Condensed Gas in Hot Halos
Ongoing accretion onto galactic disks has been recently theorized to progress
via the unstable cooling of the baryonic halo into condensed clouds. These
clouds have been identified as analogous to the High-Velocity Clouds (HVCs)
observed in HI in our Galaxy. Here we compare the distribution of HVCs observed
around our own Galaxy and extra-planar gas around the Andromeda galaxy to these
possible HVC analogs in a simulation of galaxy formation that naturally
generates these condensed clouds. We find a very good correspondence between
these observations and the simulation, in terms of number, angular size,
velocity distribution, overall flux and flux distribution of the clouds. We
show that condensed cloud accretion only accounts for ~ 0.2 M_solar / year of
the current overall Galactic accretion in the simulations. We also find that
the simulated halo clouds accelerate and become more massive as they fall
toward the disk. The parameter space of the simulated clouds is consistent with
all of the observed HVC complexes that have distance constraints, except the
Magellanic Stream which is known to have a different origin. We also find that
nearly half of these simulated halo clouds would be indistinguishable from
lower-velocity gas and that this effect is strongest further from the disk of
the galaxy, thus indicating a possible missing population of HVCs. These
results indicate that the majority of HVCs are consistent with being infalling,
condensed clouds that are a remnant of Galaxy formation.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, ApJ Accepted. Some changes to techniqu
The disruption of nearby galaxies by the Milky Way
Interactions between galaxies are common and are an important factor in
determining their physical properties such as position along the Hubble
sequence and star-formation rate. There are many possible galaxy interaction
mechanisms, including merging, ram-pressure stripping, gas compression,
gravitational interaction and cluster tides. The relative importance of these
mechanisms is often not clear, as their strength depends on poorly known
parameters such as the density, extent and nature of the massive dark halos
that surround galaxies. A nearby example of a galaxy interaction where the
mechanism is controversial is that between our own Galaxy and two of its
neighbours -- the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds. Here we present the first
results of a new HI survey which provides a spectacular view of this
interaction. In addition to the previously known Magellanic Stream, which
trails 100 degrees behind the Clouds, the new data reveal a counter-stream
which lies in the opposite direction and leads the motion of the Clouds. This
result supports the gravitational model in which leading and trailing streams
are tidally torn from the body of the Magellanic Clouds.Comment: 17 pages with 5 figures in gif format, scheduled for publication in
the August 20th, 1998 issue of Natur
A Widespread, Clumpy Starburst in the Isolated Ongoing Dwarf Galaxy Merger dm1647+21
Interactions between pairs of isolated dwarf galaxies provide a critical
window into low-mass hierarchical, gas-dominated galaxy assembly and the
buildup of stellar mass in low-metallicity systems. We present the first
VLT/MUSE optical IFU observations of the interacting dwarf pair dm1647+21,
selected from the TiNy Titans survey. The H emission is widespread and
corresponds to a total unobscured star formation rate (SFR) of 0.44 M
yr, 2.7 times higher than the SFR inferred from SDSS data. The implied
specific SFR (sSFR) for the system is elevated by more than an order of
magnitude above non-interacting dwarfs in the same mass range. This increase is
dominated by the lower-mass galaxy, which has a sSFR enhancement of 50.
Examining the spatially-resolved maps of classic optical line diagnostics, we
find the ISM excitation can be fully explained by star formation. The velocity
field of the ionized gas is not consistent with simple rotation. Dynamical
simulations indicate that the irregular velocity field and the stellar
structure is consistent with the identification of this system as an ongoing
interaction between two dwarf galaxies. The widespread, clumpy enhancements in
star formation in this system point to important differences in the effect of
mergers on dwarf galaxies, compared to massive galaxies: rather than the
funneling of gas to the nucleus and giving rise to a nuclear starburst,
starbursts in low-mass galaxy mergers may be triggered by large-scale ISM
compression, and thus be more distributed.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. 11 pages, 5 figures, 1 table.
Figures slightly degraded to meet arXiv size restrictions. For more
information about TiNy Titans see https://lavinia.as.arizona.edu/~tinytitans
A Very Sensitive 21cm Survey for Galactic High-Velocity HI
Very sensitive HI 21cm observations have been made in 860 directions at dec
>= -43deg in search of weak, Galactic, high-velocity HI emission lines at
moderate and high Galactic latitudes. One-third of the observations were made
toward extragalactic objects. The median 4-sigma detection level is NHI =
8x10^{17} cm^-2 over the 21' telescope beam. High-velocity HI emission is
detected in 37% of the directions; about half of the lines could not have been
seen in previous surveys. The median FWHM of detected lines is 30.3 km/s. High-
velocity HI lines are seen down to the sensitivity limit of the survey implying
that there are likely lines at still lower values of NHI. The weakest lines
have a kinematics and distribution on the sky similar to that of the strong
lines, and thus do not appear to be a new population. Most of the emission
originates from objects which are extended over several degrees; few appear to
be compact sources. At least 75%, and possibly as many as 90%, of the lines are
associated with one of the major high-velocity complexes. The Magellanic Stream
extends at least 10 deg to higher Galactic latitude than previously thought and
is more extended in longitude as well. Although there are many lines with low
column density, their numbers do not increase as rapidly as NHI^-1, so most of
the HI mass in the high-velocity cloud phenomenon likely resides in the more
prominent clouds. The bright HI features may be mere clumps within larger
structures, and not independent objects.Comment: 88 pages includes 22 figures Accepted for Publication in ApJ Suppl.
June 200
The Relationship Between Baryons and Dark Matter in Extended Galaxy Halos
The relationship between gas-rich galaxies and Ly-alpha absorbers is
addressed in this paper in the context of the baryonic content of galaxy halos.
Deep Arecibo HI observations are presented of two gas-rich spiral galaxies
within 125 kpc projected distance of a Ly-alpha absorber at a similar velocity.
The galaxies investigated are close to edge-on and the absorbers lie almost
along their major axes, allowing for a comparison of the Ly-alpha absorber
velocities with galactic rotation. This comparison is used to examine whether
the absorbers are diffuse gas rotating with the galaxies' halos, outflow
material from the galaxies, or intergalactic gas in the low redshift cosmic
web. The results indicate that if the gas resides in the galaxies' halos it is
not rotating with the system and possibly counter-rotating. In addition, simple
geometry indicates the gas was not ejected from the galaxies and there are no
gas-rich satellites detected down to 3.6 - 7.5 x 10^6 Msun, or remnants of
satellites to 5-6 x 10^{18} cm^{-2}. The gas could potentially be infalling
from large radii, but the velocities and distances are rather high compared to
the high velocity clouds around the Milky Way. The most likely explanation is
the galaxies and absorbers are not directly associated, despite the vicinity of
the spiral galaxies to the absorbers (58-77 kpc from the HI edge). The spiral
galaxies reside in a filament of intergalactic gas, and the gas detected by the
absorber has not yet come into equilibrium with the galaxy. These results also
indicate that the massive, extended dark matter halos of spiral galaxies do not
commonly have an associated diffuse baryonic component at large radii.Comment: Accepted by AJ, 33 pages preprint format, see
http://www.astro.lsa.umich.edu/~mputman/putman1.pdf for a higher resolution
versio
HIPASS High-Velocity Clouds: Properties of the Compact and Extended Populations
A catalog of Southern anomalous-velocity HI clouds at Decl. < +2 deg is
presented, based on data from the HI Parkes All-Sky Survey (HIPASS). The
improved sensitivity (5sigma: T_B = 0.04 K) and resolution (15.5') of the
HIPASS data results in a substantial increase in the number of individual
clouds (1956, as well as 41 galaxies) compared to previous surveys. Most
high-velocity emission features, HVCs, have a filamentary morphology and are
loosely organized into large complexes extending over tens of degrees. In
addition, 179 compact and isolated anomalous-velocity objects, CHVCs, are
identified based on their size and degree of isolation. 25% of the CHVCs
originally classified by Braun & Burton (1999) are reclassified. Both the
entire population of high-velocity emission features and the CHVCs alone have
typical HI masses of ~ 4.5 D(kpc)^2 solar masses and have similar slopes for
their column density and flux distributions. On the other hand, the CHVCs
appear to be clustered and the population can be broken up into three spatially
distinct groups, while the entire population of clouds is more uniformly
distributed with a significant percentage aligned with the Magellanic Stream.
The median velocities are V_GSR = -38 km/s for the CHVCs and -30 km/s for all
of the anomalous-velocity clouds. Based on the catalog sizes, high-velocity
features cover 19% of the southern sky and CHVCs cover 1%. (abridged)Comment: 32 pages, 26 figures in gif format, 2 ascii tables, to appear in the
Jan 2002 issue of The Astronomical Journal, high resolution version available
at http://origins.Colorado.EDU/~mputman/pubs.htm
The Arecibo Galaxy Environment Survey III: Observations Toward the Galaxy Pair NGC 7332/7339 and the Isolated Galaxy NGC 1156
Two 5 square degree regions around the NGC 7332/9 galaxy pair and the
isolated galaxy NGC 1156 have been mapped in the 21-cm line of neutral hydrogen
(HI) with the Arecibo L-band Feed Array out to a redshift of ~0.065
km/s) as part of the Arecibo Galaxy Environment Survey. One of the aims of this
survey is to investigate the environment of galaxies by identifying dwarf
companions and interaction remnants; both of these areas provide the potential
for such discoveries. The neutral hydrogen observations were complemented by
optical and radio follow-up observations with a number of telescopes. A total
of 87 galaxies were found, of which 39 (45 per cent) were previously cataloged
and 15 (17 per cent) have prior redshifts. Two dwarf galaxies have been
discovered in the NGC 7332 group and a single dwarf galaxy in the vicinity NGC
1156 . A parallel optical search of the area revealed one further possible
dwarf galaxy near NGC 7332.Comment: 18 pages, 17 figures, uses emulateap
Religious and Spiritual Diversity Training in Clinical Psychology Doctoral Programs: Do Explicitly Christian Programs Differ from Other Programs?
The American Psychological Association (APA) accredits several explicitly Christian doctoral programs in clinical psychology. To what extent do these programs offer training in religious and spiritual diversity that students may nor receive at orher APA-accredited programs? A total of 353 students from 5 explicitly Christian programs were surveyed using the same questionnaire used in a more general national sample of APA-accredited doctoral programs a year previously. Students in explicitly Christian programs reported receiving more training in religious and spiritual diversity and more training in advanced competencies regarding religious and spiritual issues in professional work d1an students in the general sample of AP A-accredited programs. At the same rime, students in explicitly Christian programs reported receiving less training in ethnic/ racial and socioeconomic diversity than students in other programs. Diversity training implications are considered
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