2,014 research outputs found
A multi-wavelength study of the dwarf galaxies NGC 2915 and NGC 1705 : star formation, gas dynamics and dark matter
Includes bibliographical references (p. 233-242).This thesis presents the results of a detailed multi-wavelength study of the nearby blue compact dwarf galaxies NGC 2915 and NGC 1705. The primary data set (nearly 100 hours of on-source data) for each galaxy consists of new observations of the neutral hydrogen (Hi) line obtained with the Australia Telescope Compact Array, October 2006 - May 2007. The stellar disk of NGC 1705 is host to an intense star-bursting core which is rapidly depleting the galaxy's central Hi reservoir. This galaxy can be used to rigorously test theories of star formation. Detailed studies of the distribution and kinematics of the neutral inter- stellar medium (ISM) within each galaxy are carried out. A suite of star formation recipes and models are examined for each galaxy to quantify the relationship between the observed star formation activity and the distribution and kinematics of the ISM
The Globular Cluster System in the Inner Region of M87
1057 globular cluster candidates have been identified in a WFPC2 image of the
inner region of M87. The Globular Cluster Luminosity Function (GCLF) can be
well fit by a Gaussian profile with a mean value of m_V^0=23.67 +/- 0.07 mag
and sigma=1.39 +/- 0.06 mag (compared to m_V^0=23.74 mag and sigma=1.44 mag
from an earlier study using the same data by Whitmore it et al. 1995). The GCLF
in five radial bins is found to be statistically the same at all points,
showing no clear evidence of dynamical destruction processes based on the
luminosity function (LF), in contradiction to the claim by Gnedin (1997).
Similarly, there is no obvious correlation between the half light radius of the
clusters and the galactocentric distance. The core radius of the globular
cluster density distribution is R_c=56'', considerably larger than the core of
the stellar component (R_c=6.8''). The mean color of the cluster candidates is
V-I=1.09 mag which corresponds to an average metallicity of Fe/H = -0.74 dex.
The color distribution is bimodal everywhere, with a blue peak at V-I=0.95 mag
and a red peak at V-I=1.20 mag. The red population is only 0.1 magnitude bluer
than the underlying galaxy, indicating that these clusters formed late in the
metal enrichment history of the galaxy and were possibly created in a burst of
star/cluster formation 3-6 Gyr after the blue population. We also find that
both the red and the blue cluster distributions have a more elliptical shape
(Hubble type E3.5) than the nearly spherical galaxy. The average half light
radius of the clusters is ~2.5 pc which is comparable to the 3 pc average
effective radius of the Milky Way clusters, though the red candidates are ~20%
smaller than the blue ones.Comment: 40 pages, 17 figures, 4 tables, latex, accepted for publication in
the Ap
HI observations of the nearest starburst galaxy NGC 253 with the SKA precursor KAT-7
We present HI observations of the Sculptor Group starburst spiral galaxy NGC
253, obtained with the Karoo Array Telescope (KAT-7). KAT-7 is a pathfinder for
the SKA precursor MeerKAT, under construction. The short baselines and low
system temperature of the telescope make it very sensitive to large scale, low
surface brightness emission. The KAT-7 observations detected 33% more flux than
previous VLA observations, mainly in the outer parts and in the halo for a
total HI mass of M. HI can be found at
large distances perpendicular to the plane out to projected distances of ~9-10
kpc away from the nucleus and ~13-14 kpc at the edge of the disk. A novel
technique, based on interactive profile fitting, was used to separate the main
disk gas from the anomalous (halo) gas. The rotation curve (RC) derived for the
HI disk confirms that it is declining in the outer parts, as seen in previous
optical Fabry-Perot measurements. As for the anomalous component, its RC has a
very shallow gradient in the inner parts and turns over at the same radius as
the disk, kinematically lagging by ~100 km/sec. The kinematics of the observed
extra planar gas is compatible with an outflow due to the central starburst and
galactic fountains in the outer parts. However, the gas kinematics shows no
evidence for inflow. Analysis of the near-IR WISE data, shows clearly that the
star formation rate (SFR) is compatible with the starburst nature of NGC 253.Comment: 18 pages, 20 figures, 8 Tables. Accepted for publication to MNRA
Towards a Full Census of the Obscure(d) Vela Supercluster using MeerKAT
Recent spectroscopic observations of a few thousand partially obscured
galaxies in the Vela constellation revealed a massive overdensity on
supercluster scales straddling the Galactic Equator (l 272.5deg) at km/s. It remained unrecognised because it is located just beyond the
boundaries and volumes of systematic whole-sky redshift and peculiar velocity
surveys - and is obscured by the Milky Way. The structure lies close to the
apex where residual bulkflows suggest considerable mass excess. The uncovered
Vela Supercluster (VSCL) conforms of a confluence of merging walls, but its
core remains uncharted. At the thickest foreground dust column densities (|b| <
6 deg) galaxies are not visible and optical spectroscopy is not effective. This
precludes a reliable estimate of the mass of VSCL, hence its effect on the
cosmic flow field and the peculiar velocity of the Local Group. Only systematic
HI-surveys can bridge that gap. We have run simulations and will present
early-science observing scenarios with MeerKAT 32 (M32) to complete the census
of this dynamically and cosmologically relevant supercluster. M32 has been put
forward because this pilot project will also serve as precursor project for HI
MeerKAT Large Survey Projects, like Fornax and Laduma. Our calculations have
shown that a survey area of the fully obscured part of the supercluster, where
the two walls cross and the potential core of the supercluster resides, can be
achieved on reasonable time-scales (200 hrs) with M32.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication, Proceedings of
Science, workshop on "MeerKAT Science: On the Pathway to the SKA", held in
Stellenbosch 25-27 May 201
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