24 research outputs found
Molecular gas and star formation in the centers of Virgo spirals
The CO and H alpha flux distributions for a sample of Virgo spirals were mapped out in an attempt to understand the coupling between gas dynamics and star formation in spiral galaxies. A broad range of morphological types were observed (types Sab through Scd) under the hypothesis that the gas dynamics is most influential in determining the overall appearance of a spiral galaxy. Only non-barred spirals were considered so that the well-studied but complicated properties of bars and their role in inducing star formation would not be a factor. All galaxies were chosen from the Virgo cluster to eliminate uncertainties due to distance errors. Since the dynamical seat of a spiral is at its center, it was expected that the dynamics of the central region would influence global properties of the rest of the disk. This could happen through the existence or absence of an inner Lindblad resonance (according to the degree of central concentration of mass) to modulate swing amplification of spiral waves, or the persistence of an oval distortion to initiate an instability which leads to spiral structure
Large High Performance Optics for Spaceborne Missions: L-3 Brashear Experience and Capability
Brashear is a division of L-3 Communications, Integrated Optical Systems. Brashear is well known for the ground-based telescopes it has manufactured at its facilities and delivered to satisfied customers. Optics from meter-class up to 8.3 meters diameter have been fabricated in Brashear's facilities. Brashear has demonstrated capabilities for large spaceborne optics. We describe in this paper both legacy and new Brashear capabilities for high performance spaceborne optics
The Binary White Dwarf LHS 3236
The white dwarf LHS 3236 (WD1639+153) is shown to be a double-degenerate
binary, with each component having a high mass. Astrometry at the U.S. Naval
Observatory gives a parallax and distance of 30.86 +/- 0.25 pc and a tangential
velocity of 98 km/s, and reveals binary orbital motion. The orbital parameters
are determined from astrometry of the photocenter over more than three orbits
of the 4.0-year period. High-resolution imaging at the Keck Observatory
resolves the pair with a separation of 31 and 124 mas at two epochs. Optical
and near-IR photometry give a set of possible binary components. Consistency of
all data indicates that the binary is a pair of DA stars with temperatures near
8000 and 7400 K and with masses of 0.93 and 0.91 M_solar; also possible, is a
DA primary and a helium DC secondary with temperatures near 8800 and 6000 K and
with masses of 0.98 and 0.69 M_solar. In either case, the cooling ages of the
stars are ~3 Gyr and the total ages are <4 Gyr. The combined mass of the binary
(1.66--1.84 M_solar) is well above the Chandrasekhar limit; however, the
timescale for coalescence is long.Comment: Accepted for the Astrophysical Journa
A Survey for Faint Stars of Large Proper Motion Using Extra Poss II Plates
We have conducted a search for new stars of high proper motion (0.4
arcsec yr) using POSS II fields for which an extra IIIaF (red) plate of
good quality exists, along with useable IIIaJ (blue) and IV-N (infrared) plates
taken at epochs differing by a minimum of 1.5 years. Thirty-five fields at
Galactic latitudes 20 were measured, covering some 1378 deg,
or 3.3% of the sky. Searches with three plate combinations as well as all four
plates were also made. Seven new stars were found with 0.5 arcsec
yr, which were therefore missed in the Luyten Half Second (LHS) Catalog.
One of these is a common proper motion binary consisting of two subdwarf M
stars; another is a cool white dwarf with probable halo kinematics. As a test
of our completeness -- and of our ability to test that of Luyten -- 216 of 230
catalogued high proper motion stars were recovered by the software, or 94%.
Reasons for incompleteness of the LHS are discussed, such as the simple fact
that POSS II plates have deeper limiting magnitudes and greater overlap than
did POSS I. Nonetheless, our results suggest that the LHS is closer to 90%
complete than recent estimates in the literature (e.g 60%), and we propose a
reason to account for one such lower estimate. The conclusion that the LHS
Catalog is more complete has implications for the nature of the halo dark
matter. In particular it strengthens the constraint on the local density of
halo stars, especially white dwarfs at M17-18.Comment: Astronomical Journal, in press, 16 pages, 3 figure
Parallax and Luminosity Measurements of an L Subdwarf
We present the first parallax and luminosity measurements for an L subdwarf,
the sdL7 2MASS J05325346+8246465. Observations conducted over three years by
the USNO infrared astrometry program yield an astrometric distance of
26.7+/-1.2 pc and a proper motion of 2.6241+/-0.0018"/yr. Combined with
broadband spectral and photometric measurements, we determine a luminosity of
log(Lbol/Lsun) = -4.24+/-0.06 and Teff = 1730+/-90 K (the latter assuming an
age of 5-10 Gyr), comparable to mid-type L field dwarfs. Comparison of the
luminosity of 2MASS J05325346+8246465 to theoretical evolutionary models
indicates that its mass is just below the sustained hydrogen burning limit, and
is therefore a brown dwarf. Its kinematics indicate a ~110 Myr, retrograde
Galactic orbit which is both eccentric (3 <~ R <~ 8.5 kpc) and extends well
away from the plane (Delta_Z = +/-2 kpc), consistent with membership in the
inner halo population. The relatively bright J-band magnitude of 2MASS
J05325346+8246465 implies significantly reduced opacity in the 1.2 micron
region, consistent with inhibited condensate formation as previously proposed.
Its as yet unknown subsolar metallicity remains the primary limitation in
constraining its mass; determination of both parameters would provide a
powerful test of interior and evolutionary models for low-mass stars and brown
dwarfs.Comment: Accepted to ApJ 10 September 2007; 13 pages, 5 figures, 3 tables,
formatted in emulateapj styl
Trigonometric Parallaxes of Central Stars of Planetary Nebulae
Trigonometric parallaxes of 16 nearby planetary nebulae are presented,
including reduced errors for seven objects with previous initial results and
results for six new objects. The median error in the parallax is 0.42 mas, and
twelve nebulae have parallax errors less than 20 percent. The parallax for
PHL932 is found here to be smaller than was measured by Hipparcos, and this
peculiar object is discussed. Comparisons are made with other distance
estimates. The distances determined from these parallaxes tend to be
intermediate between some short distance estimates and other long estimates;
they are somewhat smaller than estimated from spectra of the central stars.
Proper motions and tangential velocities are presented. No astrometric
perturbations from unresolved close companions are detected.Comment: 24 pages, includes 4 figures. Accepted for A
Trigonometric Parallaxes for Two Late-Type Subdwarfs: LSR1425+71 (sdM8.0) and the Binary LSR1610-00 (sd?M6pec)
Trigonometric parallax astrometry and BVI photometry are presented for two
late-type subdwarf candidates, LSR1425+71 (sdM8.0) and LSR1610-00 (sd?M6pec).
For the former we measure an absolute parallax of 13.37+/-0.51 mas yielding
Mv=15.25+/-0.09. The astrometry for LSR1610-00 shows that this object is an
astrometric binary with a period of 1.66+/-0.01 yr. The photocentric orbit is
derived from the data; it has a moderate eccentricity (e ~ 0.44+/-0.02) and a
semi-major axis of 0.28+/-0.01 AU based on our measured absolute parallax of
31.02+/-0.26 mas. Our radial velocity measure of -108.1+/-1.6 km/s for
LSR1610-00 at epoch 2006.179, when coupled with the observation of -95+/-1 km/s
at epoch 2005.167 by Reiners & Basri, indicates a systemic radial velocity of
-101+/-1 km/s for the LSR1610-00AB pair. The galactic velocity components for
LSR1425+71 and LSR1610-00AB -- (U,V,W)=(84+/-6, -202+/-13, 66+/-14) km/s and
(U,V,W)=(36+/-2, -232+/-2, -61+/-2) km/s, respectively. For both stars, the
velocities are characteristic of halo population kinematics. However, modeling
shows that both stars have orbits around the galaxy with high eccentricity that
pass remarkably close to the galactic center. LSR1425+71 has a luminosity and
colors consistent with its metal-poor subdwarf spectral classification, while
LSR1610-00 has a luminosity and most colors indicative of being only mildly
metal-poor, plus a uniquely red B-V color. The companion to LSR1610-00 must be
a low-mass, substellar brown dwarf. We speculate on the paradoxical nature of
LSR1610-00 and possible sources of its peculiarities.Comment: Accepted for ApJ. 37 pages, including 8 figure