142 research outputs found
Widespread Shocks in the Nucleus of NGC 404 Revealed by Near-infrared Integral Field Spectroscopy
We present high spatial resolution, integral field spectrograph (IFS) observations of the nearby low-ionization nuclear emission-line region (LINER) galaxy NGC 404 at 1.25 μm (J band) and 2.2 μm (K band) near-infrared (NIR) wavelengths. Although NGC 404 is thought to host an intermediate-mass black hole (BH) at its center, it has been unclear whether accretion onto the BH or another mechanism such as shock excitation drives its LINER emission at optical/NIR wavelengths. We use the OSIRIS IFS at Keck Observatory behind laser guide star adaptive optics to map the strength and kinematics of [Fe ii], H_2, and hydrogen recombination lines at spatial resolutions of 1 pc across the central 30 pc of the galaxy. The H_2 gas is in a central rotating disk, and ratios of multiple H_2 lines indicate that the molecular gas is thermally excited, with some contribution from UV fluorescence. The [Fe ii] emission is more extended and diffuse than the molecular gas and has a different kinematic structure that reaches higher velocities/dispersions. We also map the strength of the CO stellar absorption feature and constrain the dominant age of the nuclear stellar population to ~1 Gyr. Finally, we find regions across the nucleus of NGC 404 with [Fe ii]/Paβ line ratios up to 6.5, ~2.5 times higher than the ratio measured from spatially integrated spectra. From these high line ratios, we conclude that shocks are the dominant physical mechanism exciting NGC 404's LINER emission and argue that a possible source of this shock excitation is a supernova remnant
Leveraging Resources Between the Senior Community Service Employment Program and the Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program
This report describes a project that sought to determine the role the Senior Community Service Employment Program (SCSEP) might play in supporting the Long-Term Care Ombudsman in their expanded role in the HOME Choice Transitions program. Potential responsibilities of the SCSEP program participant are described along with suggested training to carry out these duties
The Shortest Known Period Star Orbiting our Galaxy's Supermassive Black Hole
Stars with short orbital periods at the center of our galaxy offer a powerful
and unique probe of a supermassive black hole. Over the past 17 years, the W.
M. Keck Observatory has been used to image the Galactic center at the highest
angular resolution possible today. By adding to this data set and advancing
methodologies, we have detected S0-102, a star orbiting our galaxy's
supermassive black hole with a period of just 11.5 years. S0-102 doubles the
number of stars with full phase coverage and periods less than 20 years. It
thereby provides the opportunity with future measurements to resolve
degeneracies in the parameters describing the central gravitational potential
and to test Einstein's theory of General Relativity in an unexplored regime.Comment: Science, in press (published Oct 5, 2012). See Science Online for the
Supplementary Material, or here:
http://www.astro.ucla.edu/~ghezgroup/gc/research/S02_S0102_orbits.htm
The Keplerian orbit of G2
We give an update of the observations and analysis of G2 - the gaseous red
emission-line object that is on a very eccentric orbit around the Galaxy's
central black hole and predicted to come within 2400 Rs in early 2014. During
2013, the laser guide star adaptive optics systems on the W. M. Keck I and II
telescopes were used to obtain three epochs of spectroscopy and imaging at the
highest spatial resolution currently possible in the near-IR. The updated
orbital solution derived from radial velocities in addition to Br-Gamma line
astrometry is consistent with our earlier estimates. Strikingly, even ~6 months
before pericenter passage there is no perceptible deviation from a Keplerian
orbit. We furthermore show that a proposed "tail" of G2 is likely not
associated with it but is rather an independent gas structure. We also show
that G2 does not seem to be unique, since several red emission-line objects can
be found in the central arcsecond. Taken together, it seems more likely that G2
is ultimately stellar in nature, although there is clearly gas associated with
it.Comment: Proceedings of IAU Symposium #303, "The Galactic Center: Feeding and
Feedback in a Normal Galactic Nucleus"; 2013 September 30 - October 4, Santa
Fe New Mexico (USA
An Improved Distance and Mass Estimate for Sgr A* from a Multistar Orbit Analysis
We present new, more precise measurements of the mass and distance of our
Galaxy's central supermassive black hole, Sgr A*. These results stem from a new
analysis that more than doubles the time baseline for astrometry of faint stars
orbiting Sgr A*, combining two decades of speckle imaging and adaptive optics
data. Specifically, we improve our analysis of the speckle images by using
information about a star's orbit from the deep adaptive optics data (2005 -
2013) to inform the search for the star in the speckle years (1995 - 2005).
When this new analysis technique is combined with the first complete
re-reduction of Keck Galactic Center speckle images using speckle holography,
we are able to track the short-period star S0-38 (K-band magnitude = 17,
orbital period = 19 years) through the speckle years. We use the kinematic
measurements from speckle holography and adaptive optics to estimate the orbits
of S0-38 and S0-2 and thereby improve our constraints of the mass ()
and distance () of Sgr A*: and kpc. The
uncertainties in and as determined by the combined orbital fit
of S0-2 and S0-38 are improved by a factor of 2 and 2.5, respectively, compared
to an orbital fit of S0-2 alone and a factor of 2.5 compared to previous
results from stellar orbits. This analysis also limits the extended dark mass
within 0.01 pc to less than at 99.7% confidence, a
factor of 3 lower compared to prior work.Comment: 56 pages, 14 figures, accepted to Ap
Widespread Shocks in the Nucleus of NGC 404 Revealed by Near-infrared Integral Field Spectroscopy
We present high spatial resolution, integral field spectrograph (IFS) observations of the nearby low-ionization nuclear emission-line region (LINER) galaxy NGC 404 at 1.25 μm (J band) and 2.2 μm (K band) near-infrared (NIR) wavelengths. Although NGC 404 is thought to host an intermediate-mass black hole (BH) at its center, it has been unclear whether accretion onto the BH or another mechanism such as shock excitation drives its LINER emission at optical/NIR wavelengths. We use the OSIRIS IFS at Keck Observatory behind laser guide star adaptive optics to map the strength and kinematics of [Fe ii], H_2, and hydrogen recombination lines at spatial resolutions of 1 pc across the central 30 pc of the galaxy. The H_2 gas is in a central rotating disk, and ratios of multiple H_2 lines indicate that the molecular gas is thermally excited, with some contribution from UV fluorescence. The [Fe ii] emission is more extended and diffuse than the molecular gas and has a different kinematic structure that reaches higher velocities/dispersions. We also map the strength of the CO stellar absorption feature and constrain the dominant age of the nuclear stellar population to ~1 Gyr. Finally, we find regions across the nucleus of NGC 404 with [Fe ii]/Paβ line ratios up to 6.5, ~2.5 times higher than the ratio measured from spatially integrated spectra. From these high line ratios, we conclude that shocks are the dominant physical mechanism exciting NGC 404's LINER emission and argue that a possible source of this shock excitation is a supernova remnant
Testing the gravitational theory with short-period stars around our Galactic Center
Motion of short-period stars orbiting the supermassive black hole in our
Galactic Center has been monitored for more than 20 years. These observations
are currently offering a new way to test the gravitational theory in an
unexplored regime: in a strong gravitational field, around a supermassive black
hole. In this proceeding, we present three results: (i) a constraint on a
hypothetical fifth force obtained by using 19 years of observations of the two
best measured short-period stars S0-2 and S0-38 ; (ii) an upper limit on the
secular advance of the argument of the periastron for the star S0-2 ; (iii) a
sensitivity analysis showing that the relativistic redshift of S0-2 will be
measured after its closest approach to the black hole in 2018.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, proceedings of the 52nd Rencontres de Moriond,
Gravitation Sessio
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