248 research outputs found
The Luminous Starburst Ring in NGC 7771: Sequential Star Formation?
Only two of the twenty highly luminous starburst galaxies analyzed by Smith
et al. exhibit circumnuclear rings of star formation. These galaxies provide a
link between 10^11 L_sun systems and classical, less-luminous ringed systems.
We report the discovery of a near-infrared counterpart to the nuclear ring of
radio emission in NGC 7771. A displacement between the ~10 radio bright clumps
and the ~10 near-infrared bright clumps indicates the presence of multiple
generations of star formation. The estimated thermal emission from each radio
source is equivalent to that of ~35000 O6 stars. Each near-infrared bright knot
contains ~5000 red supergiants, on average. The stellar mass of each knot is
estimated to be ~10^7 M_sun. The implied time-averaged star formation rate is
\~40 M_sun per yr. Several similarities are found between the properties of
this system and other ringed and non-ringed starbursts. Morphological
differences between NGC 7771 and the starburst + Seyfert 1 galaxy NGC 7469
suggest that NGC 7771 may not be old enough to fuel an AGN, or may not be
capable of fueling an AGN. Alternatively, the differences may be unrelated to
the presence or absence of an AGN and may simply reflect the possibility that
star formation in rings is episodic.Comment: accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal (10 January
1999); 48 pages including 13 figures; AAS LaTe
The horizontal root fractures. Diagnosis, clinical management and three-year follow-up
Objective: The aim of this retrospective analysis is to describe and to evaluate the middle third horizontal root fractures, long term clinical management results and to estimate the effect of treatments factors upon healing and survival rate. Methods: Our clinical study included 42 patients presenting a middle third horizontal root fracture in permanent dentition. For each patient at t the parameters recorded were: diastasis, mobility, sensibility, periodontal inflammation, pulpal pathology, associated fracture and dislocation of the coronal fragment. The follow-up was performed after 6 (t1), 12 (t2) and 36 (t3) months after the trauma, both clinically and radiologically. Clinical examination, vitality tests and a radiological evaluation (periapical x-ray) were performed. Results: At t0 it was observed: diastasis (14, 3%), mobility (28, 6%), thermal sensibility (61, 9%), periodontal inflammation (4, 8%), pulpal pathology (38, 1%) and dislocation of the coronal fragment (47, 6%) of the patients. The treatment plan started with the coronal fragment repositioning and the blockage (splint) with the adjacent teeth in 47, 6% of cases. A root canal treatment was performed at t in 52,4% of the fractured teeth. Statistical analysis showed the highest level of significance between pulpal lesions (t) and associated fractures. The mobility, sensibility and pulpar lesions parameters, showed a reduction in relation to the follow up timing, with a main variation remarkably evident between t and t1. The ratio between observation time and the presence of diastasis was statistically significant. Conclusion: The analysis of the clinical results exhibits the high success rate of a conservative approach in the treatment of teeth fractured in the middle third of the root
The stellar content of the super star clusters in NGC 1569
We discuss HST FOS ultraviolet spectroscopy and NICMOS near-infrared
photometry of four young super star clusters in the central region of the
irregular starburst galaxy NGC 1569. The new observations coupled with previous
HST WFPC2 photometry and ground-based optical spectroscopy allow us to isolate
and age-date the hot and cool stellar components of these massive clusters. We
analyze the two components A1 and A2 of the brightest super star cluster NGC
1569-A. This cluster received previous attention due to the simultaneous
presence of Wolf-Rayet stars and red supergiants. The FOS spectra provide the
first evidence for O-stars in NGC 1569-A, indicating a young (5 Myr) stellar
component in A1 and/or A2. Comparison with other high-mass star-forming regions
suggests that the O- and Wolf-Rayet stars are spatially coincident. If so,
cluster A2 could be the host of the very young O- and Wolf-Rayet population,
and the somewhat older red supergiants could be predominantly located in A1.
The mass-to-light ratio of NGC 1569-A1 is analyzed in five optical and infrared
photometric bands and compared to evolutionary synthesis models. No indications
for an anomalous initial mass function are found, consistent with a scenario
where this cluster is the progenitor of present-day globular clusters. The
clusters A1 and A2 are compared to clusters B and #30. The latter two clusters
are older and fully dominated by red supergiants. All four super star clusters
provide a significant fraction (20 - 25%) of the total optical and
near-infrared light in the central region of the galaxy. The photometric
properties of the super star cluster population in NGC 1569 resemble those of
the populous clusters in the Magellanic Clouds
Stellar Populations Found in the Central kpc of Four Luminous Compact Blue Galaxies at Intermediate Redshift
We investigate the star formation history of the central regions of four
Luminous Compact Blue Galaxies (LCBGs). LCBGs are blue (B-V<0.6), compact
(MU_B<21.5 mag arcsec^-2) galaxies with absolute magnitudes M_B brighter than
-17.5. The LCBGs analyzed here are located at 0.436<z<0.525. They are among the
most luminous (M_B < -20.5), blue (B-V < 0.4) and high surface brightness (MU_B
< 19.0 mag arcsec^-2) of this population. The observational data used were
obtained with the HST/STIS spectrograph, the HST/WF/PC-2 camera and the
HST/NICMOS first camera. We find evidence for multiple stellar populations. One
of them is identified as the ionizing population, and the other one corresponds
to the underlying stellar generation.
The estimated masses of the inferred populations are compatible with the
dynamical masses, which are typically 2--10x 10^9 M_sun. Our models also
indicate that the first episodes of star formation the presented LCBGs
underwent happened between 5 and 7 Gyr ago.
We compare the stellar populations found in LCBGs with the stellar
populations present in bright, local HII galaxies, nearby spheroidal systems
and Blue Compact Dwarf Galaxies. It turns out that the underlying stellar
populations of LCBGs are similar yet bluer to those of local HII galaxies. It
is also the case that the passive color evolution of the LCBGs could convert
them into local Spheroidal galaxies if no further episode of star formation
takes place. Our results help to impose constraints on evolutionary scenarios
for the population of LCBGs found commonly at intermediate redshifts.Comment: 35 pages, 10 Figures. Accepted for publication in AJ. Compile with
pdflatex. Contains png figure
Ultraviolet Properties of Primeval Galaxies: Theoretical Models from Stellar Population Synthesis
The ultraviolet luminosity evolution of star-forming galaxies is explored
from the theoretical point of view, especially focusing on the theory of UV
energetics in simple and composite stellar populations and its relationship to
the star formation rate and other main evolutionary parameters.
Galaxy emission below 3000 Angstroms directly correlates with actual star
formation, not depending on the total mass of the system. A straightforward
calibration is obtained, in this sense, from the theoretical models at 1600,
2000 and 2800 Angstroms, and a full comparison is carried out with IUE data and
other balloon-borne observations for local galaxies.
The claimed role of late-type systems as prevailing contributors to the
cosmic UV background is reinforced by our results; at 2000 Angstroms Im
irregulars are found in fact nearly four orders of magnitude brighter than
ellipticals, per unit luminous mass.
The role of dust absorption in the observation of high-redshift galaxies is
assessed, comparing model output and observed spectral energy distribution of
local galaxy samples. Similar to what we observe in our own galaxy, a quick
evolution in the dust environment might be envisaged in primeval galaxies, with
an increasing fraction of luminous matter that would escape the regions of
harder and "clumpy" dust absorption on a timescale of some 10^7 yr, comparable
with the lifetime of stars of 5-10 solar masses.Comment: 20 pages and 14 PS figures - To appear in the March issue of the
Astronomical Journal. See http://www.merate.mi.astro.it/~eps/home.html for
more info and model retrieva
Intergalactic HII Regions Discovered in SINGG
A number of very small isolated HII regions have been discovered at projected
distances up to 30 kpc from their nearest galaxy. These HII regions appear as
tiny emission line objects in narrow band images obtained by the NOAO Survey
for Ionization in Neutral Gas Galaxies (SINGG). We present spectroscopic
confirmation of four isolated HII regions in two systems, both systems have
tidal HI features. The results are consistent with stars forming in interactive
debris due to cloud-cloud collisions. The H-alpha luminosities of the isolated
HII regions are equivalent to the ionizing flux of only a few O stars each.
They are most likely ionized by stars formed in situ, and represent atypical
star formation in the low density environment of the outer parts of galaxies. A
small but finite intergalactic star formation rate will enrich and ionize the
surrounding medium. In one system, NGC 1533, we calculate a star formation rate
of 1.5e-3 msun/yr, resulting in a metal enrichment of ~1e-3 solar for the
continuous formation of stars. Such systems may have been more common in the
past and a similar enrichment level is measured for the `metallicity floor' in
damped Lyman-alpha absorption systems.Comment: accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journal, 19 pages,
including 5 figures, some low resolution. Paper with high resolution images
can be downloaded from
http://astro.ph.unimelb.edu.au/~eryan/publications/eldots.ps.g
Mid Infrared Properties of Low Metallicity Blue Compact Dwarf Galaxies From Spitzer/IRS
We present a {\em Spitzer}-based mid-infrared study of a large sample of Blue
Compact Dwarf galaxies (BCD) using the Infrared Spectrograph (IRS), including
the first mid-IR spectrum of IZw18, the archetype for the BCD class and among
the most metal poor galaxies known. We show the spectra of Polycyclic Aromatic
Hydrocarbon (PAH) emission in low-metallicity environment. We find that the
equivalent widths (EW) of PAHs at 6.2, 7.7, 8.6 and 11.2 m are generally
weaker in BCDs than in typical starburst galaxies and that the fine structure
line ratio, [NeIII]/[NeII], has a weak anti-correlation with the PAH EW. A much
stronger anti-correlation is shown between the PAH EW and the product of the
[NeIII]/[NeII] ratio and the UV luminosity density divided by the metallicity.
We conclude that PAH EW in metal-poor high-excitation environments is
determined by a combination of PAH formation and destruction effects.Comment: 41 pages, 14 figure
The Structure and Star-Formation History of NGC 5461
We compute photoionization models for the giant extragalactic H II region NGC
5461, and compare their predictions to several observational constraints. Since
we aim at reproducing not only the global properties of the region, but its
local structure also, the models are constrained to reproduce the observed
density profile, and our analysis takes into consideration the bias introduced
by the shapes and sizes of the slits used by different observers. We find that
an asymmetric nebula with a gaussian density distribution, powered by a young
burst of 3.1 Myr, satisfactorily reproduces most of the constraints, and that
the star-formation efficiency inferred from the model agrees with current
estimates. Our results strongly depend on the assumed density law, since
constant density models overestimate the hardness of the ionizing field,
affecting the deduced properties of the central stellar cluster. We illustrate
the features of our best model, and discuss the possible sources of errors and
uncertainties affecting the outcome of this type of studies.Comment: 33 pages (LaTeX), 3 .eps figures. to be published in ApJ, May 200
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