2,000 research outputs found
Pixel and Micro-lensing with NGST
Within 8 years, the current microlensing surveys of M31 will provide several
hundred events affecting unresolved stars. They will thus allow a statistical
study of the dark matter in M31's halo. The NGST will resolve these stars and
constrain the mass of the corresponding lenses. In case of on-line alerts from
ground-based observations, real-time NGST follow-up with high signal-to-noise
ratio will provide further constraints on the lenses. In addition, high
resolution observations with NGST will complement XMM and the previous optical
data and thus enable a closer insight of X-ray binaries within M31 to be
obtained. The optimal instrumentation to achieve these scientific goals will be
discussed. Last, the study of the dark matter encompassed in the galaxy
clusters would be possible with high angular resolution observations on a large
field camera and would open a new field of research.Comment: 5 pages -- presented at the NGST Science and Technology Exposition
(Hyannis, USA) 13-16 september 1999, published by the PAS
Molecular content of a type-Ia SN host galaxy at z=0.6
We study the properties and the molecular content of the host of a type-Ia
supernova (SN1997ey). This z=0.575 host is the brightest submillimetre source
of the sample of type-Ia supernova hosts observed at 450um and 850um by Farrah
et al.. Observations were performed at IRAM-30m to search for CO(2-1) and
CO(3-2) lines in good weather conditions but no signal was detected. The star
formation rate cannot exceed 50 M_sol/yr. These negative results are confronted
with an optical analysis of a Keck spectrum and other data archives. We reach
the conclusion that this galaxy is a late-type system (0.7 L^B_*), with a small
residual star-formation activity (0.2 M_sol/yr) detected in the optical. No
source of heating (AGN or starburst) is found to explain the
submillimetre-continuum flux and the non-CO detection excludes the presence of
a large amount of cold gas. We thus suggest that either the star formation
activity is hidden in the nucleus (with A_V ~ 4) or this galaxy is passive or
anemic and this flux might be associated with a background galaxy.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
CO investigation of z=0.4-1.5 galaxies
We report on the results of an IRAM-30m search for CO emission lines in three
galaxies at intermediate redshifts. The idea was to investigate the molecular
content of galaxies bright in the infrared at z=0.4-1.5, a redshift desert for
molecular line studies, poorly investigated as of yet. We integrated 8-10h per
source and did not succeed in detecting any of the sources. From our upper
limits, we are able to constrain the molecular gas content in these systems to
less than 4 to 8 x 10^9 Mo, assuming a CO-to-H_2 conversion factor (\alpha=0.8
Mo/(K km s^-1 pc^2)). We stress the current difficulty of selecting sources
with a detectable molecular content, a problem that will be faced by the ALMA
First Science projects.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
AGAPEROS: Searching for variable stars in the LMC Bar with the Pixel Method. I. Detection, astrometry and cross-identification
We extend the work developed in previous papers on microlensing with a
selection of variable stars. We use the Pixel Method to select variable stars
on a set of 2.5 x 10**6 pixel light curves in the LMC Bar presented elsewhere.
The previous treatment was done in order to optimise the detection of long
timescale variations (larger than a few days) and we further optimise our
analysis for the selection of Long Timescale and Long Period Variables
(LT&LPV). We choose to perform a selection of variable objects as comprehensive
as possible, independent of periodicity and of their position on the colour
magnitude diagram. We detail the different thresholds successively applied to
the light curves, which allow to produce a catalogue of 632 variable objects.
We present a table with the coordinate of each variable, its EROS magnitudes at
one epoch and an indicator of blending in both colours, together with a finding
chart.
A cross-correlation with various catalogues shows that 90% of those variable
objects were undetected before, thus enlarging the sample of LT&LPV previously
known in this area by a factor of 10. Due to the limitations of both the Pixel
Method and the data set, additional data -- namely a longer baseline and near
infrared photometry -- are required to further characterise these variable
stars, as will be addressed in subsequent papers.Comment: 11 pages with 10 figure
Detection of CO in the inner part of M31's bulge
We report the first detection of CO in M31's bulge. The 12CO (1-0) and (2-1)
lines are both detected in the dust complex D395A/393/384, at 1.3" (~0.35 kpc)
from the centre. From these data and from visual extinction data, we derive a
CO-luminosity to reddening ratio (and a CO-luminosity to H_2 column density
ratio) quite similar to that observed in the local Galactic clouds. The (2-1)
to (1-0) line intensity ratio points to a CO rotational temperature and a gas
kinetic temperature > 10 K. The molecular mass of the complex, inside a 25'
(100 pc) region, is 1.5 10^4 Mo.Comment: 5 pages including 4 figures (2 in colour
Star formation efficiency in galaxy interactions and mergers: a statistical study
We investigate the enhancement of star formation efficiency in galaxy
interactions and mergers, by numerical simulations of several hundred galaxy
collisions. All morphological types along the Hubble sequence are considered in
the initial conditions of the two colliding galaxies, with varying
bulge-to-disk ratios and gas mass fractions. Different types of orbits are
simulated, direct and retrograde, according to the initial relative energy and
impact parameter, and the resulting star formation history is compared to that
occuring in the two galaxies when they are isolated. Our principal results are:
(1) retrograde encounters have a larger star formation efficiency (SFE) than
direct encounters; (2) the amount of gas available in the galaxy is not the
main parameter governing the SFE in the burst phase; (3) there is an
anticorrelation between the amplitude of the star forming burst and the tidal
forces exerted per unit of time, which is due to the large amount of gas
dragged outside the galaxy by tidal tails in strong interactions; (4) globally,
the Kennicutt-Schmidt law is retrieved statistically for isolated galaxies,
interacting pairs and mergers; (5) the enhanced star formation is essentially
occurring in nuclear starbursts, triggered by inward gas flows driven by
non-axisymmetries in the galaxy disks. Direct encounters develop more
pronounced asymmetries than retrograde ones. Based on these statistical
results, we derive general laws for the enhancement of star formation in galaxy
interactions and mergers, as a function of the main parameters of the
encounter.Comment: 22 pages, 37 figures, 4 tables. Accepted on Astronomy & Astrophysic
AGAPEROS: searching for microlensing in the LMC with the pixel method. I. Data treatment and pixel light curves production
Journal ArticleRecent surveys monitoring millions of light curves of resolved stars in the LMC have discovered several microlensing events. Unresolved stars could however signi _x000C_cantly contribute to the microlensing rate towards the LMC. Monitoring pixels, as opposed to individual stars, should be able to detect stellar variability as a variation of the pixel flux. We present a _x000C_rst application of this new type of analysis (Pixel Method) to the LMC Bar. We describe the complete procedure applied to the EROS 91-92 data (one tenth of the existing CCD data set) in order to monitor pixel fluxes. First, geometric and photometric alignments are applied to each image. Averaging the images of each night reduces signi_x000C_cantly the noise level. Second, one light curve for each of the 2:1 106 pixels is built and pixels are lumped into 3.6"x 3.6" superpixels, one for each elementary pixel
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