11,102 research outputs found
Molecular Gas and Star Formation in the SAURON Early-type Galaxies
We present the results of a survey of CO emission in 43 of the 48
representative E/S0 galaxies observed in the optical with the SAURON
integral-field spectrograph. The CO detection rate is 12/43 or 28%. This is
lower than previous studies of early-types but can probably be attributed to
different sample selection criteria. As expected, earlier type, more luminous
and massive galaxies have a relatively lower molecular gas content. We find
that CO-rich galaxies tend to have higher H\beta but lower Fe5015 and Mgb
absorption indices than CO-poor galaxies. Those trends appear primarily driven
by the age of the stars, an hypothesis supported by the fact that the galaxies
with the strongest evidence of star formation are also the most CO-rich. In
fact, the early-type galaxies from the current sample appear to extend the
well-known correlations between FIR luminosity, dust mass and molecular mass of
other galaxy types. The star formation interpretation is also consistent with
the SAURON galaxies' radio continuum and FIR flux ratios, and their inferred
star formation efficiencies are similar to those in spiral galaxies. It thus
appears that we have identified the material fueling (residual) star formation
in early-type galaxies, and have demonstrated that it is actively being
transformed. Nevertheless, the lack of strong correlations between the CO
content and most stellar parameters is compatible with the idea that, in a
significant number of sample galaxies, the molecular gas has been accreted from
the outside and has properties rather independent from the old, pre-existing
stellar component.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, accepted in MNRA
HI and Hot Gas in the Outskirts of the M81 Group
Results are presented from a wide area, high resolution HI synthesis survey
of the outer regions of the nearby M81 group, where internal (galactic) and
external (group-related) evolution processes can be studied simultaneously in
great detail. The survey encompasses the star forming dwarf galaxies M81dwA,
UGC4483, and HoII, where evidence of ram pressure stripping was recently
discovered. The data do not reveal any intergalactic HI, but the outer parts of
HoII are reminiscent of tidal tails. We argue however that those structures are
equally consistent with the latest ram pressure models including cooling. The
case for a hot intergalactic medium in this poor, spiral-only group is thus
still open. The survey also puts tight constraints on possible counterparts to
the local high velocity cloud population in an external group, reaching a 3
sigma column density of 10^19 atom/cm^2 and a 6 sigma limiting mass of 1.5x10^5
M_sun.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, to be published in "Recycling Intergalactic and
Interstellar Matter," eds. P.-A. Duc, J. Braine, & E. Brinks (ASP: San
Francisco
Size matters: the value of small populations for wintering waterbirds
Protecting systematically selected areas of land is a major step towards biodiversity conservation worldwide. Indeed, the identification and designation of protected areas more often than not forms a core component of both national and international conservation policies. In this paper we provide an overview of those Special Protection Areas and Ramsar Sites that have been classified in Great Britain as of 1998/99 for a selection of wintering waterbird species, using bird count data from the Wetland Bird Survey.
The performance of this network of sites is remarkable, particularly in comparison with published analyses of networks elsewhere in the world. Nevertheless, the current site-based approach, whilst having the great benefit of simplicity, is deliberately biased towards aggregating species at the expense of the more dispersed distribution species. To ensure that the network continues successfully to protect nationally and internationally important waterbird populations, efforts now need to concentrate on the derivation of species-specific representation targets and, in particular, the ways in which these can be incorporated into the site selection process. Although these analyses concern the performance of protected areas for waterbirds in Great Britain, the results have wide-ranging importance for conservation planning in general and the design of protected area networks
Non-Schlesinger Deformations of Ordinary Differential Equations with Rational Coefficients
We consider deformations of and matrix linear ODEs with
rational coefficients with respect to singular points of Fuchsian type which
don't satisfy the well-known system of Schlesinger equations (or its natural
generalization). Some general statements concerning reducibility of such
deformations for ODEs are proved. An explicit example of the general
non-Schlesinger deformation of -matrix ODE of the Fuchsian type with
4 singular points is constructed and application of such deformations to the
construction of special solutions of the corresponding Schlesinger systems is
discussed. Some examples of isomonodromy and non-isomonodromy deformations of
matrix ODEs are considered. The latter arise as the compatibility
conditions with linear ODEs with non-singlevalued coefficients.Comment: 15 pages, to appear in J. Phys.
Gap Probabilities for Edge Intervals in Finite Gaussian and Jacobi Unitary Matrix Ensembles
The probabilities for gaps in the eigenvalue spectrum of the finite dimension
random matrix Hermite and Jacobi unitary ensembles on some
single and disconnected double intervals are found. These are cases where a
reflection symmetry exists and the probability factors into two other related
probabilities, defined on single intervals. Our investigation uses the system
of partial differential equations arising from the Fredholm determinant
expression for the gap probability and the differential-recurrence equations
satisfied by Hermite and Jacobi orthogonal polynomials. In our study we find
second and third order nonlinear ordinary differential equations defining the
probabilities in the general case. For N=1 and N=2 the probabilities and
thus the solution of the equations are given explicitly. An asymptotic
expansion for large gap size is obtained from the equation in the Hermite case,
and also studied is the scaling at the edge of the Hermite spectrum as , and the Jacobi to Hermite limit; these last two studies make
correspondence to other cases reported here or known previously. Moreover, the
differential equation arising in the Hermite ensemble is solved in terms of an
explicit rational function of a {Painlev\'e-V} transcendent and its derivative,
and an analogous solution is provided in the two Jacobi cases but this time
involving a {Painlev\'e-VI} transcendent.Comment: 32 pages, Latex2
Evidence of boosted 13CO/12CO ratio in early-type galaxies in dense environments
We present observations of CO(1-0) in 17 Combined Array for Research
in Millimeter Astronomy (CARMA) Atlas3D early-type galaxies (ETGs), obtained
simultaneously with CO(1-0) observations. The CO in six ETGs is
sufficiently bright to create images. In these 6 sources, we do not detect any
significant radial gradient in the CO/CO ratio between the
nucleus and the outlying molecular gas. Using the CO channel maps as 3D
masks to stack the CO emission, we are able to detect 15/17 galaxies to
(and 12/17 to at least 5) significance in a spatially
integrated manner. Overall, ETGs show a wide distribution of
CO/CO ratios, but Virgo cluster and group galaxies preferentially
show a CO/CO ratio about 2 times larger than field galaxies,
although this could also be due to a mass dependence, or the CO spatial extent
(). ETGs whose gas has a morphologically-settled
appearance also show boosted CO/CO ratios. We hypothesize that
this variation could be caused by (i) the extra enrichment of gas from
molecular reprocessing occurring in low-mass stars (boosting the abundance of
C to C in the absence of external gas accretion), (ii) much
higher pressure being exerted on the midplane gas (by the intracluster medium)
in the cluster environment than in isolated galaxies, or (iii) all but the
densest molecular gas clumps being stripped as the galaxies fall into the
cluster. Further observations of CO in dense environments, particularly
of spirals, as well as studies of other isotopologues, should be able to
distinguish between these hypotheses.Comment: 13 pages, 3 tables, 7 figures, accepted by MNRA
Bar Diagnostics in Edge-On Spiral Galaxies. II. Hydrodynamical Simulations
We develop diagnostics based on gas kinematics to identify the presence of a
bar in an edge-on spiral galaxy and determine its orientation. We use
position-velocity diagrams (PVDs) obtained by projecting edge-on
two-dimensional hydrodynamical simulations of the gas flow in a barred galaxy
potential. We show that when a nuclear spiral is formed, the presence of a gap
in the PVDs, between the signature of the nuclear spiral and that of the outer
parts of the disk, reliably indicates the presence of a bar. This gap is due to
the presence of shocks and inflows in the simulations, leading to a depletion
of the gas in the outer bar region. If no nuclear spiral signature is present
in a PVD, only indirect arguments can be used to argue for the presence of a
bar. The shape of the signature of the nuclear spiral, and to a lesser extent
that of the outer bar region, allows to determine the orientation of the bar
with respect to the line-of-sight. The presence of dust can also help to
discriminate between viewing angles on either side of the bar. Simulations
covering a large fraction of parameter space constrain the bar properties and
mass distribution of observed galaxies. The strongest constraint comes from the
presence or absence of the signature of a nuclear spiral in the PVD.Comment: 25 pages (AASTeX, aaspp4.sty), 11 jpg figures. Accepted for
publication in The Astrophysical Journal. Online manuscript with PostScript
figures available at: http://www.strw.leidenuniv.nl/~bureau/pub_list.htm
The algebraic and Hamiltonian structure of the dispersionless Benney and Toda hierarchies
The algebraic and Hamiltonian structures of the multicomponent dispersionless
Benney and Toda hierarchies are studied. This is achieved by using a modified
set of variables for which there is a symmetry between the basic fields. This
symmetry enables formulae normally given implicitly in terms of residues, such
as conserved charges and fluxes, to be calculated explicitly. As a corollary of
these results the equivalence of the Benney and Toda hierarchies is
established. It is further shown that such quantities may be expressed in terms
of generalized hypergeometric functions, the simplest example involving
Legendre polynomials. These results are then extended to systems derived from a
rational Lax function and a logarithmic function. Various reductions are also
studied.Comment: 29 pages, LaTe
A SAURON look at galaxy bulges
Kinematic and population studies show that bulges are generally rotationally
flattened systems similar to low-luminosity ellipticals. However, observations
with state-of-the-art integral field spectrographs, such as SAURON, indicate
that the situation is much more complex, and allow us to investigate phenomena
such as triaxiality, kinematic decoupling and population substructure, and to
study their connection to current formation and evolution scenarios for bulges
of early-type galaxies. We present the examples of two S0 bulges from galaxies
in our sample of nearby galaxies: one that shows all the properties expected
from classical bulges (NGC5866), and another case that presents kinematic
features appropriate for barred disk galaxies (NGC7332).Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publishing in AN (refereed conf.
proc. of the Euro3D Science workshop, IoA Cambridge, May 2003
OASIS High-Resolution Integral Field Spectroscopy of the SAURON Ellipticals and Lenticulars
We present a summary of high-spatial resolution follow-up observations of the
elliptical (E) and lenticular (S0) galaxies in the SAURON survey using the
OASIS integral field spectrograph. The OASIS observations explore the central
8x10" regions of these galaxies using a spatial sampling four times higher than
SAURON, often revealing previously undiscovered features. Around 75% (31/48) of
the SAURON E/S0s with central velocity dispersion >= 120 km/s were observed
with OASIS, covering well the original SAURON representative sample. We present
here an overview of this follow-up survey, and some preliminary results on
individual objects, including a previously unreported counter-rotating core in
NGC 4382; the decoupled stellar and gas velocity fields of NGC 2768; and the
strong age gradient towards the centre of NGC 3489.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in Astron. Nachr. as
refereed proceedings of Euro3D Science Workshop, IoA Cambridge, May 200
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