68 research outputs found
Local Interstellar Medium. International Astronomical Union Colloquium No. 81
Helium and hydrogen backscattering; ultraviolet and EUV absorption spectra; optical extinction and polarization; hot gases; soft X-ray observations; infrared and millimeter wavelengths; radio wavelengths and theoretical models of the interstellar matter within about 150 parsecs of the Sun were examined
The Low Velocity Wind from the Circumstellar Matter Around the B9V Star sigma Herculis
We have obtained FUSE spectra of sigma Her, a nearby binary system, with a
main sequence primary, that has a Vega-like infrared excess. We observe
absorption in the excited fine structure lines C II* at 1037 A, N II* at 1085
A, and N II** at 1086 A that are blueshifted by as much as ~30 km/sec with
respect to the star. Since these features are considerably narrower than the
stellar lines and broader than interstellar features, the C II and N II are
circumstellar. We suggest that there is a radiatively driven wind, arising from
the circumstellar matter, rather than accretion as occurs around beta Pic,
because of sigma Her's high luminosity. Assuming that the gas is liberated by
collisions between parent bodies at 20 AU, the approximate distance at which
blackbody grains are in radiative equilibrium with the star and at which 3-body
orbits become unstable, we infer dM/dt ~ 6 * 10^-12 M_{sun}/yr. This wind
depletes the minimum mass of parent bodies in less than the estimated age of
the system.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, ApJ in pres
New HST Observations of the Halo Gas of NGC 3067: Limits on the Extragalactic Ionizing Background at Low Redshift and the Lyman Continuum Escape Fraction
We present UV spectroscopy from HST/GHRS and reanalyze existing H_alpha
images of the quasar/galaxy pair 3C 232/NGC 3067 and of the halo gas associated
with NGC 3067. The spectra permit measurement of, or limits on, the column
densities of Fe I, Fe II, Mg I, and Mg II in the absorbing cloud. Two distinct
models of the extragalactic radiation field are considered: (1) the ionizing
spectrum is dominated by a power-law extragalactic continuum, and (2) the
power-law spectrum contains a Lyman break, implying enhanced flux longward of
912 A relative to the hydrogen-ionizing flux. The H_alpha images constrain the
escape fraction of Lyman continuum photons from the galaxy to f_esc <= 0.02.
With the assumption that the cloud is shielded from all galactic contributions,
we can constrain the intensity and shape of the extragalactic continuum. For an
AGN-dominated power-law extragalactic spectrum, we derive a limit on the
extragalactic ionizing flux Phi_ion >= 2600 photons cm^-2 s^-1, or I_0 >=
10^-23 erg cm^-2 s^-1 Hz^-1 sr^-1 for an ionizing spectrum with power-law index
of 1.8 and a cloud of constant density. When combined with previous upper
limits from the absence of H_alpha recombination emission from intergalactic
clouds, our observations require 2600 <= Phi_ion <= 10000 photons cm^-2 s^-1.
We show that if galactic contributions to the incident radiation are important,
it is difficult to constrain Phi_ion. These results demonstrate that galactic
halo opacities and their wavelength dependence are crucial to understanding the
abundance of low-ionization metals in the IGM.Comment: 25 Pages LaTex, 8 PostScript Figures, accepted for publication in AJ,
Nov. 99 issu
Contemporaneous IUE, EUVE, and High-Energy Observations of 3C 273
We present the results of our 1994 January and 1995 January observations of the quasar 3C 273 obtained with the International Ultraviolet Explorer (IUE) and the Extreme-Ultraviolet Explorer (EUV E). These observations were part of a large multiwavelength campaign to observe 3C 273 from radio through γ-rays. Our 1995 January photometric observations with the EUV E Lexan/B Deep Survey (DS) instrument indicate strong evidence for variability, at a 99% confidence level, during the 12 day observing period. We have utilized ROSAT PSPC soft X-ray power-law models to correlate with EUV E count rates. Besides variations in the normalization level between both observations, our EUV count rates are consistent with a simple power-law model with spectral index α ~ 1.77 (Fv ~ v^-α) that can be extrapolated lated from the soft X-rays to the EUV range. The active galactic nucleus 3C 273 is an important blazar to study because in our picture it reveals the presence of both disk and relativistic beam spectral contributions
FUSE and HST STIS Observations of Hot and Cold Gas in the AB Aurigae System
We present the first observations of a Herbig Ae star with a circumstellar
disk by the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE), as well as a
simultaneous observation of the star obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope
Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS). The spectra of AB Aurigae show
emission and absorption features arising from gasses that have a wide range in
temperature, from hot OVI emission to cold molecular hydrogen and CO
absorption. Emissions from the highly ionized species OVI and CIII present in
the FUSE spectrum are redshifted, while absorption features arising from
low-ionization species like OI, NI, and SiII are blueshifted and show
characteristic stellar wind line-profiles. We find the total column density of
molecular hydrogen toward AB Aur from the FUSE apectrum, N(H_2) = (6.8 +/- 0.5)
x 10^19 cm^-2. The gas kinetic temperature of the molecular hydrogen derived
from the ratio N(J=1)/N(J=0) is 65 +/- 4 K. The column density of the CO
observed in the STIS spectrum is N(CO) = (7.1 +/- 0.5) x 10^13 cm^-2, giving a
CO/H_2 ratio of (1.04 +/- 0.11) x 10^-6. We also use the STIS spectrum to find
the column density of HI, permitting us to calculate the total column density
of hydrogen atoms, the fractional abundance of H_2, and the gas-to-dust ratio.Comment: 5 pages, including 6 figures. LaTex2e (emulateapj5.sty). Accepted for
publication in ApJ Letter
The D/H Ratio in Interstellar Gas Towards G191-B2B
We reinvestigate the question of spatial variation of the local D/H
abundance, using both archival GHRS spectra, and new echelle spectra of
G191-B2B obtained with the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) aboard
HST. Our analysis uses stratified line-blanketed non-LTE model atmosphere
calculations to determine the shape of the intrinsic WD Lyman-alpha profile and
estimate the WD photospheric contamination of the interstellar lines. Although
three velocity components were reported previously towards G191-B2B, we detect
only two velocity components. The first component is at V(hel) ~ 8.6 km/s and
the second at V(hel) ~ 19.3 km/s, which we identify with the Local Interstellar
Cloud (LIC). From the STIS data we derive D/H = 1.60(+0.39,-0.27)X10^-5 for the
LIC component, and D/H > 1.26X10^-5 for the 8.6 km/s component (uncertainties
denote 2-sigma or 95% confidence limits). The STIS data provide no evidence for
local or component-to-component variation in the D/H ratio. Despite using two
velocity components for the profile fitting and using a more physically
realistic WD Lyman-alpha profile for G191-B2B, our re-analysis of the GHRS data
indicates a component-to-component variation as well as a variation of the D/H
ratio in the LISM, neither of which are supported by the newer STIS data. We
believe the most probable cause for this difference is the characterization of
the background due to scattered light in the GHRS and STIS spectrographs. The
two-dimensional MAMA detectors of STIS measure both the spatial and wavelength
dependences of scattered light, allowing more accurate scattered light
corrections than was possible with GHRS.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal Letters. 10 pages +
3 figures. (Abstract is abridged.
Contemporaneous IUE, EUVE, and High-Energy Observations of 3C 273
We present the results of our 1994 January and 1995 January observations of the quasar 3C 273 obtained with the International Ultraviolet Explorer (IUE) and the Extreme-Ultraviolet Explorer (EUVE). These observations were part of a large multiwavelength campaign to observe 3C 273 from radio through gamma-rays. Our 1995 January photometric observations with the EUVE Lexan/B Deep Survey (DS) instrument indicate strong evidence for variability, at a 99% confidence level, during the 12 day observing period. We have utilized ROSAT PSPC soft X-ray power-law models to correlate with EUVE count rates. Besides variations in the normalization level between both observations, our EUV count rates are consistent with a simple power-law model with spectral index alpha approx. 1.77 (F(sub upsilon) proportional to upsilon(sup -alpha) that can be extrapolated from the soft X-rays to the EUV range. The active galactic nucleus 3C 273 is an important blazar to study because in our picture it reveals the presence of both disk and relativistic beam spectral contributions
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