1,701 research outputs found
Measures of galaxy dust and gas mass with Herschel photometry and prospects for ALMA
(Abridged) Combining the deepest Herschel extragalactic surveys (PEP,
GOODS-H, HerMES), and Monte Carlo mock catalogs, we explore the robustness of
dust mass estimates based on modeling of broad band spectral energy
distributions (SEDs) with two popular approaches: Draine & Li (2007, DL07) and
a modified black body (MBB). As long as the observed SED extends to at least
160-200 micron in the rest frame, M(dust) can be recovered with a >3 sigma
significance and without the occurrence of systematics. An average offset of a
factor ~1.5 exists between DL07- and MBB-based dust masses, based on consistent
dust properties. At the depth of the deepest Herschel surveys (in the GOODS-S
field) it is possible to retrieve dust masses with a S/N>=3 for galaxies on the
main sequence of star formation (MS) down to M(stars)~1e10 [M(sun)] up to z~1.
At higher redshift (z<=2) the same result is achieved only for objects at the
tip of the MS or lying above it. Molecular gas masses, obtained converting
M(dust) through the metallicity-dependent gas-to-dust ratio delta(GDR), are
consistent with those based on the scaling of depletion time, and on CO
spectroscopy. Focusing on CO-detected galaxies at z>1, the delta(GDR)
dependence on metallicity is consistent with the local relation. We combine
far-IR Herschel data and sub-mm ALMA expected fluxes to study the advantages of
a full SED coverage.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics. Some figures
have degraded quality for filesize reason
Dense Molecular Gas and the Role of Star Formation in the Host Galaxies of Quasi-Stellar Objects
New millimeter-wave CO and HCN observations of the host galaxies of
infrared-excess Palomar Green quasi-stellar objects (PG QSOs) previously
detected in CO are presented. These observations are designed to assess the
validity of using the infrared luminosity to estimate star formation rates of
luminous AGN by determining the relative significance of dust-heating by young,
massive stars and active galactic nuclei (AGN) in QSO hosts and IRAS galaxies
with warm, AGN-like infrared colors. The HCN data show the PG QSO host IZw1 and
most of the warm IRAS galaxies to have high L_IR / L'_HCN (>1600) relative to
the cool IRAS galaxy population for which the median L_IR / L'_HCN ~
890(+440,-470). If the assumption is made that the infrared emission from cool
IRAS galaxies is reprocessed light from embedded star-forming regions, then
high values of L_IR / L'_HCN are likely the result of dust heating by the AGN.
Further, if the median ratio of L'_HCN / L'_CO ~ 0.06 observed for Seyfert
galaxies and IZw1 is applied to the PG QSOs not detected in HCN, then the
derived L_IR / L'_HCN correspond to a stellar contribution to the production of
L_IR of ~ 7-39%, and star formation rates ~ 2-37 M_sun/yr are derived for the
QSO hosts. Alternatively, if the far-infrared is adopted as the star formation
component of the total infrared in cool galaxies, the stellar contributions in
QSO hosts to their L_FIR are up to 35% higher than the percentages derived for
L_IR. This raises the possibility that the L_FIR in several of the PG QSO
hosts, including IZw1, could be due entirely to dust heated by young, massive
stars. Finally, there is no evidence that the global HCN emission is enhanced
relative to CO in galaxies hosting luminous AGN.Comment: LaTex, 31 pages, including 9 postscript figures, AJ, in press
(December 2006
Low, Milky-Way like, Molecular Gas Excitation of Massive Disk Galaxies at z~1.5
We present evidence for Milky-Way-like, low-excitation molecular gas
reservoirs in near-IR selected massive galaxies at z~1.5, based on IRAM Plateau
de Bure Interferometer CO[3-2] and NRAO Very Large Array CO[1-0] line
observations for two galaxies that had been previously detected in CO[2-1]
emission. The CO[3-2] flux of BzK-21000 at z=1.522 is comparable within the
errors to its CO[2-1] flux, implying that the CO[3-2] transition is
significantly sub-thermally excited. The combined CO[1-0] observations of the
two sources result in a detection at the 3 sigma level that is consistent with
a higher CO[1-0] luminosity than that of CO[2-1]. Contrary to what is observed
in submillimeter galaxies and QSOs, in which the CO transitions are thermally
excited up to J>=3, these galaxies have low-excitation molecular gas, similar
to that in the Milky Way and local spirals. This is the first time that such
conditions have been observed at high redshift. A Large Velocity Gradient
analysis suggests that molecular clouds with density and kinetic temperature
comparable to local spirals can reproduce our observations. The similarity in
the CO excitation properties suggests that a high, Milky-Way-like, CO to H_2
conversion factor could be appropriate for these systems. If such
low-excitation properties are representative of ordinary galaxies at high
redshift, centimeter telescopes such as the Expanded Very Large Array and the
longest wavelength Atacama Large Millimeter Array bands will be the best tools
for studying the molecular gas content in these systems through the
observations of CO emission lines.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. ApJ Letters in pres
A Compact Starburst Core in the Dusty Lyman Break Galaxy Westphal-MD11
Using the IRAM Plateau de Bure Interferometer, we have searched for CO(3-2)
emission from the dusty Lyman break galaxy Westphal-MD11 at z = 2.98. Our
sensitive upper limit is surprisingly low relative to the system's 850 um flux
density and implies a far-IR/CO luminosity ratio as elevated as those seen in
local ultraluminous mergers. We conclude that the observed dust emission must
originate in a compact structure radiating near its blackbody limit and that a
relatively modest molecular gas reservoir must be fuelling an intense nuclear
starburst (and/or deeply buried active nucleus) that may have been triggered by
a major merger. In this regard, Westphal-MD11 contrasts strikingly with the
lensed Lyman break galaxy MS1512-cB58, which is being observed apparently
midway through an extended episode of more quiescent disk star formation.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure (emulateapj), accepted by ApJ
The Molecular Gas in the Circumnuclear Region of Seyfert Galaxies
Sub-arcsecond IRAM Plateau de Bure mm-interferometric observations of the
12CO (2-1) line emission in the Seyfert~1 NGC 3227 and the Seyfert~2 NGC 1068
have revealed complex kinematic systems in the inner 100 pc to 300 pc that are
not consistent with pure circular motion in the host galaxies. Modeling of
these kinematic systems with elliptical orbits in the plane of the host galaxy
(representing gas motion in a bar potential) is a possible solution but does
not reproduce all features observed. A better description of the complex
kinematics is achieved by circular orbits which are tilted out of the plane of
the host galaxy. This could indicate that the thin circumnuclear gas disk is
warped. In the case of NGC 1068 the warp model suggests that at a radius of
about 70 pc, the gas disk is oriented edge-on providing material for the
obscuration of the AGN nucleus. The position-velocity diagrams show rising
rotation curves at r 2
x 10^7 M_solar for NGC 3227 and > 10^8 M_solar for NGC 1068 within the central
25 pc.Comment: 14 pages, Ap.J. letter, accepte
Nuclear and Non-Ionizing Energy-Loss for Coulomb Scattered Particles from Low Energy up to Relativistic Regime in Space Radiation Environment
In the space environment, instruments onboard of spacecrafts can be affected
by displacement damage due to radiation. The differential scattering cross
section for screened nucleus--nucleus interactions - i.e., including the
effects due to screened Coulomb nuclear fields -, nuclear stopping powers and
non-ionization energy losses are treated from about 50 keV/nucleon up to
relativistic energies.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Proceedings of the ICATPP Conference
on Cosmic Rays for Particle and Astroparticle Physics, Villa Olmo (Como,
Italy), 7--8 October, 2010, to be published by World Scientifi
- …
