89 research outputs found
Simultaneous multi-band detection of Low Surface Brightness galaxies with Markovian modelling
We present an algorithm for the detection of Low Surface Brightness (LSB)
galaxies in images, called MARSIAA (MARkovian Software for Image Analysis in
Astronomy), which is based on multi-scale Markovian modeling. MARSIAA can be
applied simultaneously to different bands. It segments an image into a
user-defined number of classes, according to their surface brightness and
surroundings - typically, one or two classes contain the LSB structures. We
have developed an algorithm, called DetectLSB, which allows the efficient
identification of LSB galaxies from among the candidate sources selected by
MARSIAA. To assess the robustness of our method, the method was applied to a
set of 18 B and I band images (covering 1.3 square degrees in total) of the
Virgo cluster. To further assess the completeness of the results of our method,
both MARSIAA, SExtractor, and DetectLSB were applied to search for (i) mock
Virgo LSB galaxies inserted into a set of deep Next Generation Virgo Survey
(NGVS) gri-band subimages and (ii) Virgo LSB galaxies identified by eye in a
full set of NGVS square degree gri images. MARSIAA/DetectLSB recovered ~20%
more mock LSB galaxies and ~40% more LSB galaxies identified by eye than
SExtractor/DetectLSB. With a 90% fraction of false positives from an entirely
unsupervised pipeline, a completeness of 90% is reached for sources with r_e >
3" at a mean surface brightness level of mu_g=27.7 mag/arcsec^2 and a central
surface brightness of mu^0 g=26.7 mag/arcsec^2. About 10% of the false
positives are artifacts, the rest being background galaxies. We have found our
method to be complementary to the application of matched filters and an
optimized use of SExtractor, and to have the following advantages: it is
scale-free, can be applied simultaneously to several bands, and is well adapted
for crowded regions on the sky.Comment: 39 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in A
Hierarchical progressive surveys. Multi-resolution HEALPix data structures for astronomical images, catalogues, and 3-dimensional data cubes
Scientific exploitation of the ever increasing volumes of astronomical data
requires efficient and practical methods for data access, visualisation, and
analysis. Hierarchical sky tessellation techniques enable a multi-resolution
approach to organising data on angular scales from the full sky down to the
individual image pixels. Aims. We aim to show that the Hierarchical progressive
survey (HiPS) scheme for describing astronomical images, source catalogues, and
three-dimensional data cubes is a practical solution to managing large volumes
of heterogeneous data and that it enables a new level of scientific
interoperability across large collections of data of these different data
types. Methods. HiPS uses the HEALPix tessellation of the sphere to define a
hierarchical tile and pixel structure to describe and organise astronomical
data. HiPS is designed to conserve the scientific properties of the data
alongside both visualisation considerations and emphasis on the ease of
implementation. We describe the development of HiPS to manage a large number of
diverse image surveys, as well as the extension of hierarchical image systems
to cube and catalogue data. We demonstrate the interoperability of HiPS and
Multi-Order Coverage (MOC) maps and highlight the HiPS mechanism to provide
links to the original data. Results. Hierarchical progressive surveys have been
generated by various data centres and groups for ~200 data collections
including many wide area sky surveys, and archives of pointed observations.
These can be accessed and visualised in Aladin, Aladin Lite, and other
applications. HiPS provides a basis for further innovations in the use of
hierarchical data structures to facilitate the description and statistical
analysis of large astronomical data sets.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Discovery of Recent Star Formation in the Extreme Outer Regions of Disk Galaxies
We present deep Halpha images of three nearby late-type spiral galaxies
(NGC628, NGC1058 and NGC6946), which reveal the presence of HII regions out to,
and beyond, two optical radii (defined by the 25th B-band isophote). The
outermost HII regions appear small, faint and isolated, compared to their inner
disk counterparts, and are distributed in organized spiral arm structures,
likely associated with underlying HI arms and faint stellar arms. The
relationship between the azimuthally--averaged Halpha surface brightness
(proportional to star formation rate per unit area) and the total gas surface
density is observed to steepen considerably at low gas surface densities. We
find that this effect is largely driven by a sharp decrease in the covering
factor of star formation at large radii, and not by changes in the rate at
which stars form locally. An azimuthally--averaged analysis of the
gravitational stability of the disk of NGC6946 reveals that while the existence
of star formation in the extreme outer disk is consistent with the Toomre-Q
instability model, the low rates observed are only compatible with the model
when a constant gaseous velocity dispersion is assumed. We suggest that
observed behaviour could also be explained by a model in which the star
formation rate has an intrinsic dependence on the azimuthally-averaged gas
volume density, which decreases rapidly in the outer disk due to the vertical
flaring of the gas layer.Comment: 10 pages, 2 embedded postscript files, 3 jpeg images; accepted for
publication in ApJ Letter
The CDS information hub
The Centre de Donnees astronomiques de Strasbourg (CDS) provides homogeneousaccess to heterogeneous information of various origins: information aboutastronomical objects in Simbad; catalogs and observation logs in VizieR and inthe catalogue service; reference images and overlays in Aladin; nomenclature inthe Dictionary of Nomenclature; Yellow Page services; the AstroGLU resourcediscovery tool; mirror copies of other reference services; and documentation.With the implementation of links between the CDS services, and with otheron--line reference information, CDS has become a major hub in the rapidlyevolving world of information retrieval in astronomy, developing efficienttools to help astronomers to navigate in the world-wide `Virtual Observatory'under construction, from data in the observatory archives to results publishedin journals. The WWW interface to the CDS services is available at:http://cdsweb.u-strasbg.fr
Quantifying Resonant Structure in NGC 6946 from Two-dimensional Kinematics
We study the two-dimensional kinematics of the H-alpha-emitting gas in the
nearby barred Scd galaxy, NGC 6946, in order to determine the pattern speed of
the primary m=2 perturbation mode. The pattern speed is a crucial parameter for
constraining the internal dynamics, estimating the impact velocities of the
gravitational perturbation at the resonance radii, and to set up an
evolutionary scenario for NGC 6946. Our data allows us to derive the best
fitting kinematic position angle and the geometry of the underlying gaseous
disk, which we use to derive the pattern speed using the Tremaine-Weinberg
method. We find a main pattern speed Omega_p=22 km/s/kpc, but our data clearly
reveal the presence of an additional pattern speed Omega_p=47 km/s/kpc in a
zone within 1.25 kpc of the nucleus. Using the epicyclic approximation, we
deduce the location of the resonance radii and confirm that inside the outer
Inner Lindblad Resonance radius of the main oval, a primary bar has formed
rotating at more than twice the outer pattern speed. We further confirm that a
nuclear bar has formed inside the Inner Lindblad Resonance radius of the
primary bar, coinciding with the inner Inner Lindblad Resonance radius of the
large-scale m=2 mode oval.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
TESELA: a new Virtual Observatory tool to determine blank fields for astronomical observations
The observation of blank fields, regions of the sky devoid of stars down to a
given threshold magnitude, constitutes one of the typical important calibration
procedures required for the proper reduction of astronomical data obtained in
imaging mode. This work describes a method, based on the use of the Delaunay
triangulation on the surface of a sphere, that allows the easy generation of
blank fields catalogues. In addition to that, a new tool named TESELA,
accessible through the WEB, has been created to facilitate the user to
retrieve, and visualise using the VO-tool Aladin, the blank fields available
near a given position in the sky.Comment: Accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical
Society. 11 pages, 10 figures. Related Web tool accessible at
http://sdc.cab.inta-csic.es/tesel
Luminous AGB stars in nearby galaxies. A study using Virtual Observatory tools
Aims. This study focuses on very luminous Mbol<-6.0 mag AGB stars with
J-Ks>1.5 mag and H-Ks>0.4 mag in the LMC, SMC, M31, and M33 from 2MASS data.
Methods.The data were taken from the 2MASS All-Sky Point Source catalogue
archive. We used Virtual Observatory tools and took advantage of its
capabilities at various stages in the analysis.
Results. It is well known that stars with the colors we selected correspond
mainly to carbon stars. Although the most luminous AGBs detected here contain a
large number of carbon stars,they are not included in existing catalogues
produced from data in the optical domain, where they are not visible since they
are dust-enshrouded. A comparison of the AGB stars detected with combined near
and mid-infrared data from MSX and 2MASS in the LMC shows that 10% of the
bright AGB stars are bright carbon stars never detected before and that the
other 50% are OH/IR oxygen rich stars, whereas the 40% that remain were not
cross-matched.
Conclusions. The catalogues of the most luminous AGB stars compiled here are
an important complement to existing data. In the LMC, these bright AGB stars
are centrally located, whereas they are concentrated in an active
star-formation ring in M31. In the SMC and M33, there are not enough of them to
draw definite conclusions, although they tend to be centrally located. Their
luminosity functions are similar for the four galaxies we studied.Comment: 16 pages, 12 figures, 4 tables (Appendix A), accepted in A&
The infrared dust bubble N22: an expanding HII region and the star formation around it
Aims. To increase the observational samples of star formation around
expanding Hii regions, we analyzed the interstellar medium and star formation
around N22.
Methods. We used data extracted from the seven large-scale surveys from
infrared to radio wavelengths. In addition we used the JCMT observations of the
J = 3-2 line of 12CO emission data released on CADC and the 12CO J = 2-1 and J
=3-2 lines observed by the KOSMA 3 m telescope. We performed a multiwavelength
study of bubble N22.
Results. A molecular shell composed of several clumps agrees very well with
the border of N22, suggesting that its expansion is collecting the surrounding
material. The high integrated 12CO line intensity ratio (ranging from 0.7 to
1.14) implies that shocks have driven into the molecular clouds. We identify
eleven possible O-type stars inside the Hii region, five of which are located
in projection inside the cavity of the 20 cm radio continuum emission and are
probably the exciting-star candidates of N22. Twenty-nine YSOs (young stellar
objects) are distributed close to the dense cores of N22. We conclude that star
formation is indeed active around N22; the formation of most of YSOs may have
been triggered by the expanding of the Hii region. After comparing the
dynamical age of N22 and the fragmentation time of the molecular shell, we
suggest that radiation-driven compression of pre-existing dense clumps may be
ongoing.Comment: accepted in A&A 30/05/2012. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1010.5430 by other author
The SPECFIND V2.0 catalogue of radio cross-identifications and spectra. SPECFIND meets the Virtual Observatory
The new release of the SPECFIND radio cross-identification catalogue,
SPECFIND V2.0, is presented. It contains 107488 cross-identified objects with
at least three radio sources observed at three independent frequencies.
Compared to the previous release the number of entry radio catalogues is
increased from 20 to 97 containing 115 tables. This large increase was only
made possible by the development of four tools at CDS which use the standards
and infrastructure of the Virtual Observatory (VO). This was done in the
framework of the VO-TECH European Design Study of the Sixth Framework Program.
We give an overview of the different classes of radio sources that a user can
encounter. Due to the increase of frequency coverage of the input radio
catalogues, this release demonstrates that the SPECFIND algorithm is able to
detect spectral breaks around a frequency of ~1 GHz.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Kinematic parameters and membership probabilities of open clusters in the Bordeaux PM2000 catalogue
We derive lists of proper-motions and kinematic membership probabilities for
49 open clusters and possible open clusters in the zone of the Bordeaux PM2000
proper motion catalogue (). We test
different parametrisations of the proper motion and position distribution
functions and select the most successful one. In the light of those results, we
analyse some objects individually. The segregation between cluster and field
member stars, and the assignment of membership probabilities, is accomplished
by applying a new and fully automated method based on both parametrisations of
the proper motion and position distribution functions, and genetic algorithm
optimization heuristics associated with a derivative-based hill climbing
algorithm for the likelihood optimization. We present a catalogue comprising
kinematic parameters and associated membership probability lists for 49 open
clusters and possible open clusters in the Bordeaux PM2000 catalogue region. We
note that this is the first determination of proper motions for five open
clusters. We confirm the non-existence of two kinematic populations in the
region of 15 previously suspected non-existent objects.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication in Astronomy
& Astrophysic
- …