624 research outputs found
Empirical Uncertainty Estimators for Astrometry from Digital Databases
In order to understand the positional uncertainties of arbitrary objects in
several of the current major databases containing astrometric information, a
sample of extragalactic radio sources with precise positions in the
International Celestial Reference Frame (ICRF) is compared with the available
positions of their optical counterparts. The discrepancies between the radio
and various optical positions are used to derive empirical uncertainty
estimators for the USNO-A2.0, USNO-A1.0, Guide Star Selection System (GSSS)
images, and the first and second Digitized Sky Surveys (DSS-I and DSS-II). In
addition, an estimate of the uncertainty when the USNO-A2.0 catalog is
transferred to different image data is provided. These optical astrometric
frame uncertainties can in some cases be the dominant error term when
cross-identifying sources at different wavelengths.Comment: 12 pages including 2 figures and 1 table. Accepted for publication in
The Astronomical Journal, October 1999. Values in Table 1 for DSS I corrected
99-07-1
The 7-channel FIR HCN Interferometer on J-TEXT Tokamak
A seven-channel far-infrared hydrogen cyanide (HCN) laser interferometer has
been established aiming to provide the line integrated plasma density for the
J-TEXT experimental scenarios. A continuous wave glow discharge HCN laser
designed with a cavity length 3.4 m is used as the laser source with a
wavelength of 337 {\mu}m and an output power up to 100 mW. The system is
configured as a Mach-Zehnder type interferometer. Phase modulation is achieved
by a rotating grating, with a modulation frequency of 10 kHz which corresponds
to the temporal resolution of 0.1 ms. The beat signal is detected by TGS
detector. The phase shift induced by the plasma is derived by the comparator
with a phase sensitivity of 0.06 fringe. The experimental results measured by
the J-TEXT interferometer are presented in details. In addition, the inversed
electron density profile done by a conventional approach is also given. The
kinematic viscosity of dimethyl silicone and vibration control is key issues
for the system performance. The laser power stability under different kinematic
viscosity of silicone oil is presented. A visible improvement of measured
result on vibration reduction is shown in the paper.Comment: conference (15th-International Symposium on Laser-Aided Plasma
Diagnostics
Fabry Perot Halpha Observations of the Barred Spiral NGC 3367
We report the gross properties of the velocity field of the barred spiral
galaxy NGC 3367. The following values were found: inclination with respect to
the plane of the sky, i=30 deg; position angle (PA) of receding semi major axis
PA=51 and systemic velocity V(sys)=3032 km/s. Large velocity dispersion are
observed of upt o 120 km/s in the nuclear region, of up to 70 km/s near the
eastern bright sources just beyond the edge of the stellar bar where three
spiral arms seem to start and in the western bright sources at about 10 kpc.
Deviations from normal circular velocities are observed from all the disk but
mainly from the semi circle formed by the string of south western Halpha
sources. An estimate of the dynamical mass is M(dyn)=2x10^11 Msolar.Comment: Accepted to be published in May 2001 issue in the A.J. 19 pages, 7
figure
U B V R I Photometry of Stellar Structures throughout the Disk of the Barred Galaxy NGC 3367
We report new detailed surface U, B, V, R, and I photometry of 81 stellar
structures in the disk of the barred galaxy NGC 3367. The images show many
different structures indicating that star formation is going on in the most
part of the disk. NGC 3367 is known to have a very high concentration of
molecular gas distribution in the central regions of the galaxy and bipolar
synchrotron emission from the nucleus with two lobes (at 6 kpc) forming a
triple structure similar to a radio galaxy. We have determined the U, B, V, R,
and I magnitudes and U - B, B - V, U - V, and V - I colors for the central
region (nucleus), a region which includes supernovae 2003 AA, and 79 star
associations throughout NGC 3367. Estimation of ages of star associations is
very difficult due to several factors, among them: filling factor, metallicity,
spatial distribution of each structure and the fact that we estimated the
magnitudes with a circular aperture of 16 pixels in diameter, equivalent to
kpc. However, if the colors derived for NGC 3367 were similar to
the colors expected of star clusters with theoretical evolutionary star tracks
developed for the LMC and had a similar metallicity, NGC 3367 show 51 percent
of the observed structures with age type SWB I (few tens of Myrs), with seven
sources outside the bright surface brightness visible disk of NGC 3367.Comment: Accepted for publication (abr 2007) in The Astronomical Journal (July
2007 issue
A Search for "Dwarf" Seyfert Nuclei. III. Spectroscopic Parameters and Properties of the Host Galaxies
We have completed an optical spectroscopic survey of the nuclear regions (r <
200 pc) of a large sample of nearby galaxies. Although the main objectives of
the survey are to search for low-luminosity active galactic nuclei and to
quantify their luminosity function, the database can be used for a variety of
other purposes. This paper presents measurements of the spectroscopic
parameters for the 418 emission-line nuclei, along with a compilation of the
global properties of all 486 galaxies in the survey. Stellar absorption
generally poses a serious obstacle to obtaining accurate measurement of
emission lines in nearby galactic nuclei. We describe a procedure for removing
the starlight from the observed spectra in an efficient and objective manner.
The main parameters of the emission lines (intensity ratios, fluxes, profile
widths, equivalent widths) are measured and tabulated, as are several stellar
absorption-line and continuum indices useful for studying the stellar
population. Using standard nebular diagnostics, we determine the probable
ionization mechanisms of the emission-line objects. The resulting spectral
classifications provide extensive information on the demographics of
emission-line nuclei in the local universe. This new catalog contains over 200
objects showing spectroscopic evidence for recent star formation and an equally
large number of active galactic nuclei, including 46 which show broad H-alpha
emission. These samples will serve as the basis of future studies of nuclear
activity in nearby galaxies.Comment: To appear in the Astrophysical Journal Supplements. LaTex, 31 pages,
plus an additional 23 figures and 5 tables. AASTex macro aaspp4.st
Properties of H II Regions in the Centers of Nearby Galaxies
As part of an optical spectroscopic survey of nearby, bright galaxies, we
have identified a sample of over 200 emission-line nuclei having optical
spectra resembling those of giant extragalactic H II regions. Such "H II
nuclei," powered by young, massive stars, are found in a substantial fraction
of nearby galaxies, especially those of late Hubble type. This paper summarizes
the observational characteristics of H II nuclei, contrasts the variation of
their properties with Hubble type, and compares the nuclear H II regions with
those found in galaxy disks. Similarities and differences between H II nuclei
and luminous starburst nuclei are additionally noted.Comment: To appear in the Astrophysical Journal. LaTex, 37 pages including 15
postscript figures. AAStex macros include
Classification of Static Charged Black Holes in Higher Dimensions
The uniqueness theorem for static charged higher dimensional black hole
containing an asymptotically flat spacelike hypersurface with compact interior
and with both degenerate and non-degenerate components of event horizon is
proposed. By studies of the near-horizon geometry of degenerate horizons one
was able to eliminate the previous restriction concerning the inequality
fulfilled by the charges of the adequate components of the aforementioned
horizons.Comment: 9 pages, RevTex, to be published in Phys.Rev. D1
The Central Engines of 19 LINERs as Viewed by Chandra
Using archival Chandra observations of 19 LINERs we explore the X-ray
properties of their inner kiloparsec to determine the origin of their nuclear
X-ray emission, to investigate the presence of an AGN, and to identify the
power source of the optical emission lines. The relative numbers of LINER types
in our sample are similar to those in optical spectroscopic surveys. We find
that diffuse, thermal emission is very common and is concentrated within the
central few hundred parsec. The average spectra of the hot gas in spirals and
ellipticals are very similar to those of normal galaxies. They can be fitted
with a thermal plasma (kT~0.5 keV) plus a power law (photon index of 1.3-1.5)
model. There are on average 3 detected point sources in their inner kiloparsec
with L(0.5-10 keV)~10^37-10^40 erg/s. The average cumulative luminosity
functions for sources in spirals and ellipticals are identical to those of
normal galaxies. In the innermost circle of 2.5" radius in each galaxy we find
an AGN in 12 of the 19 galaxies. The AGNs contribute a median of 60% of the
0.5-10 keV luminosity of the central 2.5" region, they have luminosities of
10^37-10^39 erg/s (Eddington ratios 10^-8 to 10^-5). The ionizing luminosity of
the AGNs is not enough to power the observed optical emission lines in this
particular sample. Thus, we suggest that the lines are powered either by the
mechanical interaction of an AGN jet (or wind) with the circumnuclear gas, or
by stellar processes, e.g. photoionization by post-AGB stars or young stars.Comment: Accepted by Ap.J. 23 pages, 8 figures, emulatepj format, images of
fig 1 not included, for complete PDF preprint see
http://www.astro.psu.edu/users/mce/preprints
Detecting Compton Reflection and a Broad Iron Line in MCG-5-23-16 with the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer
We report the detection with the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer of a Compton
reflection signature in the Seyfert galaxy MCG-5-23-16. RXTE also resolves the
Fe K-alpha fluorescence line with FWHM ~48,000 km s^{-1}. This measurement
provides the first independent confirmation of ASCA detections in Seyfert
galaxies of broad Fe K-alpha lines that are thought to be the signature of
emission from the inner regions of an accretion disk orbiting a black hole.
Under the assumption that reflection arises from an isotropic source located
above a neutral accretion disk, and using a theoretical model that accounts for
the dependence of the reflected spectrum on inclination angle, we derive a 90%
confidence range for the disk inclination of i = 50 to 81 degrees. The large
inclination is consistent with that expected from the unified model for
MCG-5-23-16 based on its Seyfert 1.9 classification. If we assume that the
high-energy cutoff in the incident spectrum lies at energies larger than a few
hundred keV, then the equivalent width of the Fe K-alpha line is much larger
than predicted for the amount of reflection. This implies either an enhanced
iron abundance, a covering factor of reflecting material > 0.5, or a cutoff in
the incident spectrum at energies between ~60 and ~200 keV.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, LaTeX. 14 pages including 3 figures,
with 1 table as a separate postscript file. Typo corrected in abstrac
Properties of Quasar-Galaxy Associations and Gravitational Mesolensing by Halo Objects
A new catalog of 8382 close quasar-galaxy pairs is presented. The catalog was
composed using published catalogs of quasars and active galactic nuclei
containing 11358 objects, as well as the LEDA catalog of galaxies, which
contains on the order of 100 thousand objects. The search for pairs was carried
out in such a way that the linear distance between the galaxy and projected
quasar does not exceed 150kpc. Based on these new data, the dependence of the
number of pairs on a=z_G/z_Q is analysed, where z_G and z_Q are the redshifts
of the galaxy and quasar, respectively, revealing an excess of pairs with a<0.1
and a>0.9. This means that the galaxies in pairs are preferably located close
to either the observer or the quasar and avoid intermediate distances along the
line of sight to the quasar. Computer simulations demonstrate that it is not
possible to explain this number of pairs with the observed distribution in a as
the result of chance positional coincidences with a uniform spatial
distribution of galaxies. Data on globular clusters show that the excess of
pairs with a0.9 is consistent with the hypothesis that we are
observing distant compact objects that are strongly gravitationally lensed by
transparent lenses with a King mass distribution located in the halos of nearby
galaxies. The Hubble diagram for galaxies and quasars is presented.
Observational tests of the mesolensing hypothesis are formulated.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
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