105 research outputs found
The characteristics of the IR emission features in the spectra of Herbig Ae stars: Evidence for chemical evolution
Herbig Ae/Be stars are a class of young pre-main sequence stellar objects of
intermediate mass and are known to have varying amounts of natal cloud material
still present in their direct vicinity. We characterise the IR emission bands,
due to fluorescence by PAH molecules, in the spectra of Herbig Ae/Be stars and
link observed variations to spatial aspects of the mid-IR emission. We analysed
two PAH dominated spectra from a sample of 15 Herbig Ae/Be stars observed with
Spitzer and derive profiles of the major PAH bands. The shape and the measured
band characteristics show pronounced variations between the two Spitzer
spectra. Those variations parallel those found between three ISO spectra of
other, well-studied, Herbig Ae/Be stars. The derived profiles are compared to
those from a broad sample of sources. The Spitzer and ISO spectra exhibit
characteristics commonly interpreted respectively as interstellar matter-like
(ISM), non-ISM-like, or a combination of the two. We argue that the PAH
emission detected from the sources exhibiting a combination of ISM-like and
non-ISM-like characteristics indicates the presence of two dissimilar,
spatially separated, PAH families. As the shape of the individual PAH band
profiles reflects the composition of the PAH molecules involved, this
demonstrates that PAHs in subsequent, evolutionary linked stages of star
formation are different from those in the general ISM, implying active
chemistry. None of the detected PAH emission can be associated with the
(unresolved) disk and is thus associated with the circumstellar cloud. This
implies that chemical changes may already occur in the natal cloud and not
necessarily in the disk
Infrared Spectroscopy of the Diffuse Ionized Halo of NGC 891
We present infrared spectroscopy from the Spitzer Space Telescope at one disk
position and two positions at a height of 1 kpc from the disk in the edge-on
spiral NGC 891, with the primary goal of studying halo ionization. Our main
result is that the [Ne III]/[Ne II] ratio, which provides a measure of the
hardness of the ionizing spectrum free from the major problems plaguing optical
line ratios, is enhanced in the extraplanar pointings relative to the disk
pointing. Using a 2D Monte Carlo-based photo-ionization code which accounts for
the effects of radiation field hardening, we find that this trend cannot be
reproduced by any plausible photo-ionization model, and that a secondary source
of ionization must therefore operate in gaseous halos. We also present the
first spectroscopic detections of extraplanar PAH features in an external
normal galaxy. If they are in an exponential layer, very rough emission
scale-heights of 330-530 pc are implied for the various features. Extinction
may be non-negligible in the midplane and reduce these scale-heights
significantly. There is little significant variation in the relative emission
from the various features between disk and extraplanar environment. Only the
17.4 micron feature is significantly enhanced in the extraplanar gas compared
to the other features, possibly indicating a preference for larger PAHs in the
halo.Comment: 35 pages in ApJ preprint format, 8 figures, accepted for publication
in ApJ. Minor change to Introduction to give appropriate credit to earlier,
related wor
Spitzer detections of new dust components in the outflow of the Red Rectangle
We present Spitzer high spectral resolution IRS spectroscopy of three
positions in the carbon-rich outflow of post-AGB star HD 44179, better known as
the Red Rectangle. Surprisingly, the spectra show some strong unknown
mid-infrared resonances, in the 13-20 micron range. The shape and position of
these resonances varies with position in the nebula, and are not correlated
with the PAH features. We conclude these features are due to oxygen-rich
minerals, located in a region which is believed to be predominantly
carbon-rich. We provide possible explanations for the presence of oxygen-rich
dust in the carbon-rich outflows. Simple Mg-Fe-oxides are suggested as carriers
of these unidentified features.Comment: accepted by ApJL; 5 pages; 4 figure
The economic importance of the Belgian ports: Flemish maritime ports, Liège port complex and the port of Brussels – Report 2016
This Working Paper analyses the economic importance of the Belgian ports based largely on the annual accounts data for the year 2016. As the years prior to 2016 have been described in earlier papers in the same series, we mainly focus on the figures for 2016 and developments between 2015 and 2016. On the back of strong growth, direct value added in the Belgian ports remained more or less stable in 2016 at around € 18 000 million (current prices) or roughly 4.3% of Belgium’s GDP. Direct value added declined in the Flemish seaports, mainly in the port of Antwerp. Ghent and Zeebrugge could only partly compensate for the fall in Antwerp’s value added, while Ostend showed a small decline itself. The inland ports as a whole grew over the period 2015-2016; the port of Brussels registered a decline and the Liège port complex an increase. Indirect value added is around 82% of the direct figure. After declining from 2012, direct employment in the Belgian ports was more or less stable in 2016 at around 115 000 FTE or approximately 2.8% of Belgium’s total domestic employment. Direct employment in the Flemish seaports increased, mainly in the ports of Zeebrugge, Ghent and Antwerp. Ostend showed a decline in employment. The inland ports recorded lower employment; the port of Brussels registered a decline, as did the Liège port complex. Indirect employment is around 1.2 times the direct figure. Delving deeper into the data and trying to explain the above trends in terms of the structural composition of the Belgian ports shows that all ports are concentrated on a few sectors, and within those sectors often on just a handful of companies. Based on the figures of the traffic, the Flemish ports can be considered as real bridgeheads for trade with the UK. Developments regarding the modalities and consequences of the Brexit therefor should be followed with the greatest attention. Given the existing import and export volumes in terms of tonnage, it seems it will mostly be a challenge in Zeebrugge and to some extent for Antwerp
The 5.25 & 5.7 m Astronomical Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon Emission Features
Astronomical mid-IR spectra show two minor PAH features at 5.25 and 5.7
m (1905 and 1754 cm) that hitherto have been little studied,
but contain information about the astronomical PAH population that complements
that of the major emission bands. Here we report a study involving both
laboratory and theoretical analysis of the fundamentals of PAH spectroscopy
that produce features in this region and use these to analyze the astronomical
spectra. The ISO SWS spectra of fifteen objects showing these PAH features were
considered for this study, of which four have sufficient S/N between 5 and 6
m to allow for an in-depth analysis. All four astronomical spectra show
similar peak positions and profiles. The 5.25 m feature is peaked and
asymmetric, while the 5.7 m feature is broader and flatter. Detailed
analysis of the laboratory spectra and quantum chemical calculations show that
the astronomical 5.25 and 5.7 m bands are a blend of combination,
difference and overtone bands primarily involving CH stretching and CH in-plane
and CH out-of-plane bending fundamental vibrations. The experimental and
computational spectra show that, of all the hydrogen adjacency classes possible
on PAHs, solo and duo hydrogens consistently produce prominent bands at the
observed positions whereas quartet hydrogens do not. In all, this a study
supports the picture that astronomical PAHs are large with compact, regular
structures. From the coupling with primarily strong CH out-of-plane bending
modes one might surmise that the 5.25 and 5.7 m bands track the neutral
PAH population. However, theory suggests the role of charge in these
astronomical bands might also be important.Comment: Accepted ApJ, 40 pages in pre-print, 14 figures, two onlin
Lack of PAH emission toward low-mass embedded young stellar objects
PAHs have been detected toward molecular clouds and some young stars with
disks, but have not yet been associated with embedded young stars. We present a
sensitive mid-IR spectroscopic survey of PAH features toward a sample of
low-mass embedded YSOs. The aim is to put constraints on the PAH abundance in
the embedded phase of star formation using radiative transfer modeling.
VLT-ISAAC L-band spectra for 39 sources and Spitzer IRS spectra for 53
sources are presented. Line intensities are compared to recent surveys of
Herbig Ae/Be and T Tauri stars. The radiative transfer codes RADMC and RADICAL
are used to model the PAH emission from embedded YSOs consisting of a PMS star
with a circumstellar disk embedded in an envelope. The dependence of the PAH
feature on PAH abundance, stellar radiation field, inclination and the
extinction by the surrounding envelope is studied.
The 3.3 micron PAH feature is undetected for the majority of the sample
(97%), with typical upper limits of 5E-16 W/m^2. Compact 11.2 micron PAH
emission is seen directly towards 1 out of the 53 Spitzer Short-High spectra,
for a source that is borderline embedded. For all 12 sources with both VLT and
Spitzer spectra, no PAH features are detected in either. In total, PAH features
are detected toward at most 1 out of 63 (candidate) embedded protostars (<~
2%), even lower than observed for class II T Tauri stars with disks (11-14%).
Assuming typical class I stellar and envelope parameters, the absence of PAHs
emission is most likely explained by the absence of emitting carriers through a
PAH abundance at least an order of magnitude lower than in molecular clouds but
similar to that found in disks. Thus, most PAHs likely enter the protoplanetary
disks frozen out in icy layers on dust grains and/or in coagulated form.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Spatially Resolved Spitzer-IRS Spectroscopy of the Central Region of M82
We present high spatial resolution (~ 35 parsec) 5-38 um spectra of the
central region of M82, taken with the Spitzer Infrared Spectrograph. From these
spectra we determined the fluxes and equivalent widths of key diagnostic
features, such as the [NeII]12.8um, [NeIII]15.5um, and H_2 S(1)17.03um lines,
and the broad mid-IR polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) emission features in
six representative regions and analysed the spatial distribution of these lines
and their ratios across the central region. We find a good correlation of the
dust extinction with the CO 1-0 emission. The PAH emission follows closely the
ionization structure along the galactic disk. The observed variations of the
diagnostic PAH ratios across M82 can be explained by extinction effects, within
systematic uncertainties. The 16-18um PAH complex is very prominent, and its
equivalent width is enhanced outwards from the galactic plane. We interpret
this as a consequence of the variation of the UV radiation field. The EWs of
the 11.3um PAH feature and the H_2 S(1) line correlate closely, and we conclude
that shocks in the outflow regions have no measurable influence on the H_2
emission. The [NeIII]/[NeII] ratio is on average low at ~0.18, and shows little
variations across the plane, indicating that the dominant stellar population is
evolved (5 - 6 Myr) and well distributed. There is a slight increase of the
ratio with distance from the galactic plane of M82 which we attribute to a
decrease in gas density. Our observations indicate that the star formation rate
has decreased significantly in the last 5 Myr. The quantities of dust and
molecular gas in the central area of the galaxy argue against starvation and
for negative feedback processes, observable through the strong extra-planar
outflows.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figures, 3 tables, ApJ, emulateap
SPITZER survey of dust grain processing in stable discs around binary post-AGB stars
Aims: We investigate the mineralogy and dust processing in the circumbinary
discs of binary post-AGB stars using high-resolution TIMMI2 and SPITZER
infrared spectra. Methods: We perform a full spectral fitting to the infrared
spectra using the most recent opacities of amorphous and crystalline dust
species. This allows for the identification of the carriers of the different
emission bands. Our fits also constrain the physical properties of different
dust species and grain sizes responsible for the observed emission features.
Results: In all stars the dust is oxygen-rich: amorphous and crystalline
silicate dust species prevail and no features of a carbon-rich component can be
found, the exception being EPLyr, where a mixed chemistry of both oxygen- and
carbon-rich species is found. Our full spectral fitting indicates a high degree
of dust grain processing. The mineralogy of our sample stars shows that the
dust is constituted of irregularly shaped and relatively large grains, with
typical grain sizes larger than 2 micron. The spectra of nearly all stars show
a high degree of crystallinity, where magnesium-rich end members of olivine and
pyroxene silicates dominate. Other dust features of e.g. silica or alumina are
not present at detectable levels. Temperature estimates from our fitting
routine show that a significant fraction of grains must be cool, significantly
cooler than the glass temperature. This shows that radial mixing is very
efficient is these discs and/or indicates different thermal conditions at grain
formation. Our results show that strong grain processing is not limited to
young stellar objects and that the physical processes occurring in the discs
are very similar to those in protoplanetary discs.Comment: 22pages, 50 figures (in appendix), accepted for A&
Optical data of meteoritic nano-diamonds from far-ultraviolet to far-infrared wavelengths
We have used different spectroscopic techniques to obtain a consistent
quantitative absorption spectrum of a sample of meteoritic nano-diamonds in the
wavelength range from the vacuum ultraviolet (0.12 m) to the far infrared
(100 m). The nano-diamonds have been isolated by a chemical treatment from
the Allende meteorite (Braatz et al.2000). Electron energy loss spectroscopy
(EELS) extends the optical measurements to higher energies and allows the
derivation of the optical constants (n & k) by Kramers-Kronig analysis. The
results can be used to restrain observations and to improve current models of
the environment where the nano-diamonds are expected to have formed. We also
show that the amount of nano-diamond which can be present in space is higher
than previously estimated by Lewis et al. (1989).Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
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