1,443 research outputs found
MM Observations of IRAS Galaxies: Dust Properties, Luminosity Functions and Contributions to the Sub-MM Background
We have studied the FIR/{\it mm} spectrum of IR galaxies by combining IRAS
photometry with new {\it mm} data on a complete southern IRAS galaxy sample.
The observed spectra and a dust model emphasize a dicothomy in the galaxy
population: half of the objects with a lot of warm dust are characterized by
higher values of the bolometric (UV-FIR) luminosity, of the dust-to-gas mass
ratio, of the dust optical depths and extinction, while those dominated by cold
({\it cirrus}) dust show opposite trends. From these data we derive the {\it
mm} luminosity function of galaxies and estimate their contribution to the
sub-{\it mm} background (BKG).Comment: 4 pg Latex file (using included crckapb.sty) gzip'd tar'd file
including 3 ps figures. Proceedings of 'Cold dust Morphology Conference',
Johannesburg, South Africa, January 21-26 1996 A wrong figure is replace
The photodisintegration of cosmic ray nuclei by solar photons: the Gerasimova-Zatsepin effect revisted
The interesting possibility of measuring the masses of high energy cosmic ray
particles by observing pairs of extensive air showers arriving at the earth
nearly simultaneously was proposed some years ago by Gerasimova and Zatsepin
(1960). Such showers would be created by the nuclear fragments originating as a
result of the photodisintegration of massive nuclei interacting with the solar
radiation field. In this paper we re-visit this possibility in the context of
existing and proposed detectors of high and ultra-high energy cosmic rays
considering a simple, yet realistic, model of the interplanetary magnetic
field. The possibilty of observing the mass fragmentation of cosmic rays
directly, however, remains challenging.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures (3 ps + 4 jpg), Astroparticle Physics (in press)
- typos corrected and other minor modification
Comment on "On the Origin of the Highest Energy Cosmic Rays"
We show that the photodisintegration of heavy cosmic ray nuclei with energies
above 10^20 eV is dominated by interactions with photons from the cosmic
microwave background radiation, rather than from infrared ones. This implies
that the observed air shower events with energies 2-3 10^20 eV cannot originate
from Fe nuclei coming from distances beyond 10 MpcComment: 1 page, 2 figure
Statistical properties of dust far-infrared emission
The description of the statistical properties of dust emission gives
important constraints on the physics of the interstellar medium but it is also
a useful way to estimate the contamination of diffuse interstellar emission in
the cases where it is considered a nuisance. The main goals of this analysis of
the power spectrum and non-Gaussian properties of 100 micron dust emission are
1) to estimate the power spectrum of interstellar matter density in three
dimensions, 2) to review and extend previous estimates of the cirrus noise due
to dust emission and 3) to produce simulated dust emission maps that reproduce
the observed statistical properties. The main results are the following. 1) The
cirrus noise level as a function of brightness has been previously
overestimated. It is found to be proportional to instead of ^1.5, where
is the local average brightness at 100 micron. This scaling is in
accordance with the fact that the brightness fluctuation level observed at a
given angular scale on the sky is the sum of fluctuations of increasing
amplitude with distance on the line of sight. 2) The spectral index of dust
emission at scales between 5 arcmin and 12.5 degrees is =-2.9 on average
but shows significant variations over the sky. Bright regions have
systematically steeper power spectra than diffuse regions. 3) The skewness and
kurtosis of brightness fluctuations is high, indicative of strong
non-Gaussianity. 4) Based on our characterization of the 100 micron power
spectrum we provide a prescription of the cirrus confusion noise as a function
of wavelength and scale. 5) Finally we present a method based on a modification
of Gaussian random fields to produce simulations of dust maps which reproduce
the power spectrum and non-Gaussian properties of interstellar dust emission.Comment: 13 pages, 13 figures. Accepted for publication in A&
An Empirically Based Calculation of the Extragalactic Infrared Background
Using the excellent observed correlations among various infrared wavebands
with 12 and 60 micron luminosities, we calculate the 2-300 micron spectra of
galaxies as a function of luminosity. We then use 12 micron and 60 micron
galaxy luminosity functions derived from IRAS data, together with recent data
on the redshift evolution of galaxy emissivity, to derive a new, empirically
based IR background spectrum from stellar and dust emission in galaxies. Our
best estimate for the IR background is of order 2-3 nW/m^2/sr with a peak
around 200 microns reaching 6-8 nW/m^2/sr. Our empirically derived background
spectrum is fairly flat in the mid-IR, as opposed to spectra based on modeling
with discrete temperatures which exhibit a "valley" in the mid-IR. We also
derive a conservative lower limit to the IR background which is more than a
factor of 2 lower than our derived flux.Comment: 14 pages AASTeX, 2 .ps figures, the Astrophysical Journal, in pres
The Subillimeter Properties of Extremely Red Objects in the CUDSS Fields
We discuss the submillimeter properties of Extremely Red Objects (EROs) in
the two Canada-UK Deep Submillimeter Survey (CUDSS) Fields. We measure the mean
submillimeter flux of the ERO population (to K < 20.7) and find 0.4 +/- 0.07
mJy for EROs selected by (I-K) > 4.0 and 0.56 +/- 0.09 mJy for EROs selected by
(R-K) > 5.3 but, these measurements are dominated by discrete, bright
submillimeter sources. We estimate that EROs produce 7-11% of the far-infrared
background at 850um. This is substantially less than a previous measurement by
Wehner, Barger & Kneib (2002) and we discuss possible reasons for this
discrepancy. We show that ERO counterparts to bright submillimeter sources lie
within the starburst region of the near-infrared color-color plot of Pozzetti &
Mannucci (2000). Finally, we claim that pairs or small groups of EROs with
separations of < 10 arcseconds often mark regions of strong submillimeter flux.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Lensing-Induced Structure of Submillimeter Sources: Implications for the Microwave Background
We consider the effect of lensing by galaxy clusters on the angular
distribution of submillimeter wavelength objects. While lensing does not change
the total flux and number counts of submillimeter sources, it can affect the
number counts and fluxes of flux-limited samples. Therefore imposing a flux cut
on point sources not only reduces the overall Poisson noise, but imprints the
correlations between lensing clusters on the unresolved flux distribution.
Using a simple model, we quantify the lensing anisotropy induced in
flux-limited samples and compare this to Poisson noise. We find that while the
level of induced anisotropies on the scale of the cluster angular correlation
length is comparable to Poisson noise for a slowly evolving cluster model, it
is negligible for more realistic models of cluster evolution. Thus the removal
of point sources is not expected to induce measurable structure in the
microwave or far-infrared backgrounds.Comment: 22 pages, 9 figures, accepted to Astrophysical Journa
Resolving the Submillimeter Background: the 850-micron Galaxy Counts
Recent deep blank field submillimeter surveys have revealed a population of
luminous high redshift galaxies that emit most of their energy in the
submillimeter. The results suggest that much of the star formation at high
redshift may be hidden to optical observations. In this paper we present
wide-area 850-micron SCUBA data on the Hawaii Survey Fields SSA13, SSA17, and
SSA22. Combining these new data with our previous deep field data, we establish
the 850-micron galaxy counts from 2 mJy to 10 mJy with a >3-sigma detection
limit. The area coverage is 104 square arcmin to 8 mJy and 7.7 square arcmin to
2.3 mJy. The differential 850-micron counts are well described by the function
n(S)=N_0/(a+S^3.2), where S is the flux in mJy, N_0=3.0 x 10^4 per square
degree per mJy, and a=0.4-1.0 is chosen to match the 850-micron extragalactic
background light. Between 20 to 30 per cent of the 850-micron background
resides in sources brighter than 2 mJy. Using an empirical fit to our >2 mJy
data constrained by the EBL at lower fluxes, we argue that the bulk of the
850-micron extragalactic background light resides in sources with fluxes near 1
mJy. The submillimeter sources are plausible progenitors of the present-day
spheroidal population.Comment: 5 pages, accepted by The Astrophysical Journal Letter
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