943 research outputs found
Deep MERLIN 5GHz Radio Imaging of Supernova Remnants in the M82 Starburst
The results of an extremely deep, 8-day long observation of the central kpc
of the nearby starburst galaxy M82 using MERLIN (Multi-Element Radio Linked
Interferometer Network) at 5 GHz are presented. The 17E-06 Jy/beam, rms noise
level in the naturally weighted image make it the most sensitive high
resolution radio image of M82 made to date. Over 50 discrete sources are
detected, the majority of which are supernova remnants, but with 13 identified
as HII regions. Sizes, flux densities and radio brightnesses are given for all
of the detected sources, which are all well resolved with a majority showing
shell or partial shell structures. Those sources within the sample which are
supernova remnants have diameters ranging from 0.3 to 6.7 pc, with a mean size
of 2.9 pc.
From a comparison with previous MERLIN 5 GHz observations made in July 1992,
which gives a 9.75 year timeline, it has been possible to measure the expansion
velocities of ten of the more compact sources, eight of which have not been
measured before. These derived expansion velocities range between 2200 and
10500 km/s.Comment: 34 pages, 10 figures. Accepted by MNRA
A high-resolution mm and cm study of the obscured LIRG NGC 4418 - A compact obscured nucleus fed by in-falling gas?
The aim of this study is to constrain the dynamics, structure and feeding of
the compact nucleous of NGC4418, and to reveal the nature of the main hidden
power source: starburst or AGN. We obtained high spatial resolution
observations of NGC4418 at 1.4 and 5 GHz with MERLIN, and at 230 and 270 GHz
with the SMA very extended configuration. We use the continuum morphology and
flux density to estimate the size of the emitting region, the star formation
rate and the dust temperature. Emission lines are used to study the kinematics
through position-velocity diagrams. Molecular emission is studied with
population diagrams and by fitting an LTE synthetic spectrum. We detect bright
1mm line emission from CO, HC3N, HNC and C34S, and 1.4 GHz absorption from HI.
The CO 2-1 emission and HI absorption can be fit by two velocity components at
2090 and 2180 km s-1. We detect vibrationally excited HC3N and HNC, with Tvib
300K. Molecular excitation is consistent with a layered temperature structure,
with three main components at 80, 160 and 300 K. For the hot component we
estimate a source size of less than 5 pc. The nuclear molecular gas surface
density of 1e4 Msun pc-2 is extremely high, and similar to that found in the
ultra-luminous infrared galaxy (ULIRG) Arp220. Our observations confirm the the
presence of a molecular and atomic in-flow, previously suggested by Herschel
observations, which is feeding the activity in the center of NGC4418. Molecular
excitation confirms the presence of a very compact, hot dusty core. If a
starburst is responsible for the observed IR flux, this has to be at least as
extreme as the one in Arp220, with an age of 3-10 Myr and a star formation rate
>10 Msun yr-1. If an AGN is present, it must be extremely Compton-thick.Comment: 18 pages, 11 figures, Accepted for publication by A&A on 10/6/201
Housing, performance and activism: thinking with performance in times of crisis
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis via the DOI in this recor
Ruin Lust and the Council Estate
Copyright © 2015 Taylor & FrancisThis is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Performance Research: A Journal of the Performing Arts on 23 June 2015, available online: http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/13528165.2015.1049034#.VegJ9J1wbcsArinze Kene's domestic drama, God's Property (Soho Theatre 2013), is set on a council estate in Deptford, South East London in 1982. The play focusses on the aftermath of longstanding racial tensions in the area that led to the 1981 Brixton Riots - a series of violent confrontations between the police and, primarily, members of the local African-Caribbean community. This article positions the council estate as an archetypal contemporary ruin. I provide an analysis of God's Property, which examines the complexities thrown up by the paradoxical estate narratives of nostalgia and ruin and the particular complications that the historical and current context of race and racial difference in South East London adds to these narratives. I offer an autoethnographic reading of the performance, framing my analysis within a lived understanding of South East London. In this way, I propose that the council estate setting of the play coupled with the realist detail in which the domestic space was depicted evoked a complex nostalgic affect that we might consider within a paradigm of ruin aesthetics
Second Epoch Global VLBI Observations of Compact Radio Sources in the M82 Starburst Galaxy
We have presented the results of a second epoch of global Very Long Baseline
Interferometry observations, taken on 23 February 2001 at a wavelength of 18
cm, of the central kiloparsec of the nearby starburst galaxy Messier 82. These
observations were aimed at studying the structural and flux evolution of some
of the compact radio sources in the central region that have been identified as
supernova remnants. The objects 41.95+575 and 43.31+592 have been studied,
expansion velocities of 2500 +/- 1200 km/s and 7350 +/- 2100 km/s respectively
have been derived. Flux densities of 31.1 +/- 0.3 mJy and 17.4 +/- 0.3 mJy have
been measured for the two objects. These results are consistent with
measurements and predictions from previous epochs.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. To be published on the accompanying CD of the
Proceedings of IAU Colloquium 192: Supernova
Monitoring of the prompt radio emission from the unusual supernova 2004dj in NGC2403
Supernova 2004dj in the nearby spiral galaxy NGC2403 was detected optically
in July 2004. Peaking at a magnitude of 11.2, this is the brightest supernova
detected for several years. Here we present Multi-Element Radio Linked
Interferometer Network (MERLIN) observations of this source, made over a four
month period, which give a position of R.A. = 07h37m17.044s, Dec
=+65deg35'57.84" (J2000.0). We also present a well-sampled 5 GHz light curve
covering the period from 5 August to 2 December 2004. With the exception of the
unusual and very close SN 1987A, these observations represent the first
detailed radio light curve for the prompt emission from a Type II-P supernova.Comment: (1) Jodrell Bank Observatory (2) University of Valencia (3)
University of Sheffield 6 pages, 1 figure. To appear in ApJ letter
Deep ALMA imaging of the merger NGC1614 - Is CO tracing a massive inflow of non-starforming gas?
Observations of the molecular gas over scales of 0.5 to several kpc provide
crucial information on how gas moves through galaxies, especially in mergers
and interacting systems, where it ultimately reaches the galaxy center,
accumulates, and feeds nuclear activity. Studying the processes involved in the
gas transport is an important step forward to understand galaxy evolution.
12CO, 13CO and C18O1-0 high-sensitivity ALMA observations were used to assess
properties of the large-scale molecular gas reservoir and its connection to the
circumnuclear molecular ring in NGC1614. The role of excitation and abundances
were studied in this context. Spatial distributions of the 12CO and 13CO
emission show significant differences. 12CO traces the large-scale molecular
gas reservoir, associated with a dust lane that harbors infalling gas. 13CO
emission is - for the first time - detected in the large-scale dust lane. Its
emission peaks between dust lane and circumnuclear molecular ring. A
12CO-to-13CO1-0 intensity ratio map shows high values in the ring region (~30)
typical for the centers of luminous galaxy mergers and even more extreme values
in the dust lane (>45). This drop in ratio is consistent with molecular gas in
the dust lane being in a diffuse, unbound state while being funneled towards
the nucleus. We find a high 16O-to-18O abundance ratio in the starburst region
(>900), typical of quiescent disk gas - by now, the starburst is expected to
have enriched the nuclear ISM in 18O relative to 16O. The massive inflow of gas
may be partially responsible for the low 18O/16O abundance since it will dilute
the starburst enrichment with unprocessed gas from greater radii. The
12CO-to-13CO abundance is consistent with this scenario. It suggests that the
nucleus of NGC1614 is in a transient phase of evolution where starburst and
nuclear growth are fuelled by returning gas from the minor merger event.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Resolving the masers in M82
Despite first being detected in the 1970s, surprisingly little is known about
the OH main line maser population in the nearby starburst galaxy M82. Sometimes
referred to as 'kilomasers', they have isotropic luminosities intermediate
between Galactic masers and those found in more distant megamasers. Several
observations have been carried by this group over the last ten years in an
attempt to get a better handle on their nature. High velocity resolution VLA
observations in 2006 showed that almost all of the maser spots, distributed
across the central arcminute of the galaxy, were apparently coincident with
background continuum features, and a handful displayed multiple velocity
components. The majority of those with velocity structure are located on a
blue-shifted arc in the pv-plane, spatially located on an arc northward of the
peculiar source known as B41.95+57.5. Now, new results from high spatial and
spectral resolution observations with the EVN have resolved several of these
masers into multiple spatial components for the first time. The maser emission
is compared with known continuum sources in the galaxy, and we conclude that at
least some of the maser emission is from high-gain maser action.Comment: Six pages, one table, one figure. To appear in proceedings of the
11th EVN Symposium (Bordeaux, 9-12 October 2012
Long-term trends in rain and cloud chemistry in a region of complex topography
Rain and cloud water from a high-elevation site and an adjacent lower-level site in the northern Pennines of England were sampled and analysed between 1994 and 2008. The comparison of wet deposition and rainfall depth at the high and low-level sites has been used to estimate the additional deposition of pollutants arising from âseederâfeederâ enhancement by washout of the orographic cap cloud that forms over the high-level site. The derived âorographic scavenging ratioâ for different ions is used to map the orographic enhancement of wet deposition across the U.K. The ratio of ion concentrations in cloud and in rain at the high-level site is also important for estimating the input of pollutants through the direct capture of cloud water droplets at high elevation sites.
Long-term trends in ion concentrations in cloud and rain showed significant downward trends in non-sea sulphate, and a weaker downward trend in nitrate, but no trend in other ions. There was also no trend in the orographic scavenging ratios, implying that the methods used to estimate orographic enhancement across the U.K. are robust over time
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