1,663 research outputs found

    A Bayesian Inference Analysis of the X-ray Cluster Luminosity-Temperature Relation

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    We present a Bayesian inference analysis of the Markevitch (1998) and Allen & Fabian (1998) cooling flow corrected X-ray cluster temperature catalogs that constrains the slope and the evolution of the empirical X-ray cluster luminosity-temperature (L-T) relation. We find that for the luminosity range 10^44.5 erg s^-1 < L_bol < 10^46.5 erg s^-1 and the redshift range z < 0.5, L_bol is proportional to T^2.80(+0.15/-0.15)(1+z)^(0.91-1.12q_0)(+0.54/-1.22). We also determine the L-T relation that one should use when fitting the Press- Schechter mass function to X-ray cluster luminosity catalogs such as the Einstein Medium Sensitivity Survey (EMSS) and the Southern Serendipitous High- Redshift Archival ROSAT Catalog (Southern SHARC), for which cooling flow corrected luminosities are not determined and a universal X-ray cluster temperature of T = 6 keV is assumed. In this case, L_bol is proportional to T^2.65(+0.23/-0.20)(1+z)^(0.42-1.26q_0)(+0.75/-0.83) for the same luminosity and redshift ranges.Comment: Accepted to The Astrophysical Journal, 20 pages, LaTe

    GRB 970228 and GRB 980329 and the Nature of Their Host Galaxie

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    We find that the local galactic extinction towards the field of gamma-ray burst GRB970228 is AV=1.090.20+0.10A_V=1.09^{+0.10}_{-0.20}, which implies a substantial dimming and change in the spectral slope of the intrinsic GRB970228 afterglow. We measure a color (V606I814)ST=0.180.61+0.51(V_{606}-I_{814})_{ST} = -0.18^{+0.51}_{-0.61} for the extended source coincident with the afterglow. Taking into account our measurement of the extinction toward this field, this color implies that the extended source is most likely a galaxy undergoing star formation, in agreement with our earlier conclusion (\cite{CL98}). In a separate analysis, we find that the inferred intrinsic spectrum of the GRB 980329 afterglow is consistent with the predictions of the simplest relativistic fireball model. We also find that the intrinsic spectrum of the afterglow is extincted both by dust (source frame A_V \ga 1 mag), and that the shape of the extinction curve is typical of young star-forming regions like the Orion Nebula but is not typical of older star-forming or starburst regions. The \approx 2 mag drop between the RR and the II bands can be explained by the far-ultraviolet non-linear component of the extinction curve if 3 \la z \la 4, and by the 2175 Å\ bump if $z given our general model

    The Extinction Towards the GRB970228 Field

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    We determine the local galactic extinction towards the field of gamma-ray burst GRB970228 using a variety of methods. We develop a maximum likelihood method for measuring the extinction by comparing galaxy counts in the field of interest to those in a field of known extinction, and apply this method to the GRB970228 field. We also measure the extinction by comparing the observed stellar spectral energy distributions of stars in the GRB970228 field to the spectral energy distribution of library spectra of the same spectral type. Finally we estimate the extinction using the Balmer emission line ratios of a galaxy in the GRB970228 field, and the neutral hydrogen column density and amount of infrared dust emission toward this field. Combining the results of these methods, we find a best-fit galactic extinction in the optical of AV=1.190.17+0.10A_V=1.19^{+0.10}_{-0.17}, which implies a a substantial dimming and change of the spectral slope of the intrinsic GRB970228 afterglow.Comment: 22 pages, including 7 figures. Submitted to Ap

    The Nature of Nearby Counterparts to Intermediate Redshift Luminous Compact Blue Galaxies II. CO Observations

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    We present the results of a single-dish beam-matched survey of the three lowest rotational transitions of CO in a sample of 20 local (D < 70 Mpc) Luminous Compact Blue Galaxies (LCBGs). These ~L*, blue, high surface brightness, starbursting galaxies were selected with the same criteria used to define LCBGs at higher redshifts. Our detection rate was 70%, with those galaxies having Lblue<7e9 Lsun no detected. We find the H2 masses of local LCBGs range from 6.6e6 to 2.7e9 Msun, assuming a Galactic CO-to-H2 conversion factor. Combining these results with our earlier HI survey of the same sample, we find that the ratio of molecular to atomic gas mass is low, typically 5-10%. Using a Large Velocity Gradient model, we find that the average gas conditions of the entire ISM in local LCBGs are similar to those found in the centers of star forming regions in our Galaxy, and nuclear regions of other galaxies. Star formation rates, determined from IRAS fluxes, are a few solar masses per year, much higher per unit dynamical mass than normal spirals. If this rate remains constant, the molecular hydrogen depletion time scales are short, 10-200 Myr.Comment: accepted for publication in the ApJ (vol 625

    Mass-detection of a matter concentration projected near the cluster Abell 1942: Dark clump or high-redshift cluster?

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    A weak-lensing analysis of wide-field VV- and II-band images centered on the cluster Abell 1942 has uncovered a mass concentration 7\sim 7 arcminutes South of the cluster center. A statistical analysis shows that the detections are highly significant. No strong concentration of bright galaxies is seen at the position of the mass concentration, though a slight galaxy number overdensity and a weak extended X-ray source are present about 1' away from its center. From the spatial dependence of the tangential alignment around the center of the mass concentration, we inferred a lower bound on the mass inside a sphere of radius 0.5h10.5 h^{-1}\ts Mpc of 1×1014h1M1\times 10^{14}h^{-1}M_\odot, much higher than crude mass estimates based on X-ray data. No firm conclusion can be inferred about the nature of the clump. If it were a high-redshift cluster, the weak X-ray flux would indicate that it had an untypically low X-ray luminosity for its mass; if the X-ray emission were physically unrelated to the mass concentration, this conclusion would be even stronger. The search for massive halos by weak lensing enables us for the first time to select halos based on their mass properties only and to detect new types of objects, e.g., dark halos. The mass concentration in the field of A1942 may be the first example of such a halo.Comment: Sumitted to A&A Main Journal. 15 pages, 11 figures. 75 Kb gzipped tar file. Figures with images not included, but available on ftp.iap.fr /pub/from_users/mellier/A1942: a1942darkclump.ps.gz (2.1 Mb
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