593 research outputs found
The Kinematics of the Ionized and Molecular Hydrogen in the Starburst Galaxy NGC 253
Near-infrared H_2 1-0 S(1) and Br_gamma velocity curves along the major axis
of NGC 253 have revealed a central velocity gradient that is seven times
steeper than that shown by the optical velocity curve. This is interpreted as
an optical depth effect due to dust. Approximately 35 mag of visual extinction
in the center is required to match the SW side of the optical velocity curve.
The spatial variation of the ratio of these lines to the CO (J=1-0) line is
compared among starburst galaxies NGC 253, M82, and NGC 4945 to investigate the
excitation mechanism responsible for the H_2 1-0 S(1) line.Comment: Uuencoded postscript file, 10 pages (4 tables included), 8 figures
available on request to [email protected], Ap.J. (in press
Parallax and Luminosity Measurements of an L Subdwarf
We present the first parallax and luminosity measurements for an L subdwarf,
the sdL7 2MASS J05325346+8246465. Observations conducted over three years by
the USNO infrared astrometry program yield an astrometric distance of
26.7+/-1.2 pc and a proper motion of 2.6241+/-0.0018"/yr. Combined with
broadband spectral and photometric measurements, we determine a luminosity of
log(Lbol/Lsun) = -4.24+/-0.06 and Teff = 1730+/-90 K (the latter assuming an
age of 5-10 Gyr), comparable to mid-type L field dwarfs. Comparison of the
luminosity of 2MASS J05325346+8246465 to theoretical evolutionary models
indicates that its mass is just below the sustained hydrogen burning limit, and
is therefore a brown dwarf. Its kinematics indicate a ~110 Myr, retrograde
Galactic orbit which is both eccentric (3 <~ R <~ 8.5 kpc) and extends well
away from the plane (Delta_Z = +/-2 kpc), consistent with membership in the
inner halo population. The relatively bright J-band magnitude of 2MASS
J05325346+8246465 implies significantly reduced opacity in the 1.2 micron
region, consistent with inhibited condensate formation as previously proposed.
Its as yet unknown subsolar metallicity remains the primary limitation in
constraining its mass; determination of both parameters would provide a
powerful test of interior and evolutionary models for low-mass stars and brown
dwarfs.Comment: Accepted to ApJ 10 September 2007; 13 pages, 5 figures, 3 tables,
formatted in emulateapj styl
Preliminary Parallaxes of 40 L and T Dwarfs from the U.S. Naval Observatory Infrared Astrometry Program
We present preliminary trigonometric parallaxes and proper motions for 22 L
dwarfs and 18 T dwarfs measured using the ASTROCAM infrared imager. Relative to
absolute parallax corrections are made by employing 2MASS and/or SDSS
photometry for reference frame stars. We combine USNO infrared and optical
parallaxes with the best available CIT system photometry to determine M_J, M_H,
and M_K values for 37 L dwarfs between spectral types L0 to L8 and 19 T dwarfs
between spectral types T0.5 and T8 and present selected absolute magnitude
versus spectral type and color diagrams, based on these results. Luminosities
and temperatures are estimated for these objects. Of special interest are the
distances of several objects which are at or near the L-T dwarf boundary so
that this important transition can be better understood. The previously
reported early-mid T dwarf luminosity excess is clearly confirmed and found to
be present at J, H, and K. The large number of objects that populate this
luminosity excess region indicates that it cannot be due entirely to selection
effects. The T dwarf sequence is extended to M_J~16.9 by 2MASS J041519-0935
which, at d = 5.74 pc, is found to be the least luminous [log(L/L_sun)=-5.58]
and coldest (T_eff~760 K) brown dwarf known. Combining results from this paper
with earlier USNO CCD results we find that, in contrast to the L dwarfs, there
are no examples of low velocity (V_tan < 20 km/s) T dwarfs. We briefly discuss
future directions for the USNO infrared astrometry program.Comment: 73 pages, 9 figures, 9 tables, accepted for publication in The
Astronomical Journa
Detection of an optical transient following the 13 March 2000 short/hard gamma-ray burst
We imaged the error box of a gamma-ray burst of the short (0.5 s), hard type
(GRB 000313), with the BOOTES-1 experiment in southern Spain, starting 4 min
after the gamma-ray event, in the I-band. A bright optical transient (OT
000313) with I = 9.4 +/- 0.1 was found in the BOOTES-1 image, close to the
error box (3-sigma) provided by BATSE. Late time VRIK'-band deep observations
failed to reveal an underlying host galaxy. If the OT 000313 is related to the
short, hard GRB 000313, this would be the first optical counterpart ever found
for this kind of events (all counterparts to date have been found for bursts of
the long, soft type). The fact that only prompt optical emission has been
detected (but no afterglow emission at all, as supported by theoretical models)
might explain why no optical counterparts have ever been found for short, hard
GRBs.This fact suggests that most short bursts might occur in a low-density
medium and favours the models that relate them to binary mergers in very
low-density enviroments.Comment: Revised version. Accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysics Letters, 5 pages, 3 figure
A Survey for Faint Stars of Large Proper Motion Using Extra Poss II Plates
We have conducted a search for new stars of high proper motion (0.4
arcsec yr) using POSS II fields for which an extra IIIaF (red) plate of
good quality exists, along with useable IIIaJ (blue) and IV-N (infrared) plates
taken at epochs differing by a minimum of 1.5 years. Thirty-five fields at
Galactic latitudes 20 were measured, covering some 1378 deg,
or 3.3% of the sky. Searches with three plate combinations as well as all four
plates were also made. Seven new stars were found with 0.5 arcsec
yr, which were therefore missed in the Luyten Half Second (LHS) Catalog.
One of these is a common proper motion binary consisting of two subdwarf M
stars; another is a cool white dwarf with probable halo kinematics. As a test
of our completeness -- and of our ability to test that of Luyten -- 216 of 230
catalogued high proper motion stars were recovered by the software, or 94%.
Reasons for incompleteness of the LHS are discussed, such as the simple fact
that POSS II plates have deeper limiting magnitudes and greater overlap than
did POSS I. Nonetheless, our results suggest that the LHS is closer to 90%
complete than recent estimates in the literature (e.g 60%), and we propose a
reason to account for one such lower estimate. The conclusion that the LHS
Catalog is more complete has implications for the nature of the halo dark
matter. In particular it strengthens the constraint on the local density of
halo stars, especially white dwarfs at M17-18.Comment: Astronomical Journal, in press, 16 pages, 3 figure
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