3,567 research outputs found
Lyman-alpha radiative transfer during the Epoch of Reionization: contribution to 21-cm signal fluctuations
During the epoch of reionization, Ly-alpha photons emitted by the first stars
can couple the neutral hydrogen spin temperature to the kinetic gas
temperature, providing the opportunity to observe the gas in emission or
absorption in the 21-cm line. Given the bright foregrounds, it is of prime
importance to determine precisely the fluctuations signature of the signal, to
be able to extract it by its correlation power.
LICORICE is a Monte-Carlo radiative transfer code, coupled to the dynamics
via an adaptative Tree-SPH code. We present here the Ly-alpha part of the
implementation, and validate it through three classical tests. Contrary to
previous works, we do not assume that P_alpha, the number of scatterings of
Ly-alpha photons per atom per second, is proportional to the Ly-alpha
background flux, but take into account the scatterings in the Ly-alpha line
wings. The latter have the effect to steepen the radial profile of P_alpha
around each source, and re-inforce the contrast of the fluctuations. In the
particular geometry of cosmic filaments of baryonic matter, Ly-alpha photons
are scattered out of the filament, and the large scale structure of P_alpha is
significantly anisotropic. This could have strong implications for the possible
detection of the 21-cm signal.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures. To be published in A&
Cold gas in group-dominant elliptical galaxies
We present IRAM 30m telescope observations of the CO(1-0) and (2-1) lines in
a sample of 11 group-dominant elliptical galaxies selected from the CLoGS
nearby groups sample. Our observations confirm the presence of molecular gas in
4 of the 11 galaxies at >4 sigma significance, and combining these with data
from the literature we find a detection rate of 43+-14%, comparable to the
detection rate for nearby radio galaxies, suggesting that group-dominant
ellipticals may be more likely to contain molecular gas than their non-central
counterparts. Those group-dominant galaxies which are detected typically
contain ~2x10^8 Msol of molecular gas, and although most have low star
formation rates (<1 Msol/yr) they have short depletion times, indicating that
the gas must be replenished on timescales ~100 Myr. Almost all of the galaxies
contain active nuclei, and we note while the data suggest that CO may be more
common in the most radio-loud galaxies, the mass of molecular gas required to
power the active nuclei through accretion is small compared to the masses
observed. We consider possible origin mechanisms for the gas, through cooling
of stellar ejecta within the galaxies, group-scale cooling flows, and gas-rich
mergers, and find probable examples of each type within our sample, confirming
that a variety of processes act to drive the build up of molecular gas in
group-dominant ellipticals.Comment: 9 pages, 5 postscript figures, 4 tables, accepted by A&A. Revised
throughout in response to referee's comments, including updates to Table 1
and Figure 4, and addition of Figure
Radio Observations of the AGN and Gas in Low Surface Brightness Galaxies
LSB galaxies have low metallicities, diffuse stellar disks, and massive HI
disks. We have detected molecular gas in two giant LSB galaxies, UGC 6614 and
F568-6. A millimeter continuum source has been detected in UGC 6614 as well. At
centimeter wavelengths we have detected and mapped the continuum emission from
the giant LSB galaxy 1300+0144. The emission is extended about the nucleus and
is most likely originating from the AGN in the galaxy. The HI gas distribution
and velocity field in 1300+0144 was also mapped. The HI disk extends well
beyond the optical disk and appears lopsided in the intensity maps.Comment: one page; submitted to proceedings of IAU Symposium 235: Galaxy
Evolution across the Hubble Tim
Distribution of the molecular absorption in front of the quasar B0218+357
The line of sight to the quasar B0218+357, one of the most studied lensed
systems, intercepts a z=0.68 spiral galaxy, which splits its image into two
main components A and B, separated by ca. 0.3'', and gives rise to molecular
absorption. Although the main absorption component has been shown to arise in
front of image A, it is not established whether some absorption from other
velocity components is also occuring in front of image B. To tackle this
question, we have observed the HCO+(2-1) absorption line during the
commissioning phase of the new very extended configuration of the Plateau de
Bure Interferometer, in order to trace the position of the absorption as a
function of frequency. Visibility fitting of the self-calibrated data allowed
us to achieve position accuracy between ~12 and 80 mas per velocity component.
Our results clearly demonstrate that all the different velocity components of
the HCO+(2-1) absorption arise in front of the south-west image A of the
quasar. We estimate a flux ratio fA/fB = 4.2 (-1.0;+1.8 at 106 GHz.Comment: accepted for publication in A&A Letter special issue for the new
extended configuration of the Plateau de Bure Interferomete
Atomic Hydrogen Properties of AGN Host Galaxies: HI in 16 NUclei of GAlaxies (NUGA) Sources
We present a comprehensive spectroscopic imaging survey of the distribution
and kinematics of atomic hydrogen (HI) in 16 nearby spiral galaxies hosting low
luminosity AGN, observed with high spectral and spatial resolution (resolution:
~20 arcsec, 5 km/s) using the NRAO Very Large Array (VLA). The sample contains
a range of nuclear types, ranging from Seyfert to star-forming nuclei and was
originally selected for the NUclei of GAlaxies project (NUGA) - a spectrally
and spatially resolved interferometric survey of gas dynamics in nearby
galaxies designed to identify the fueling mechanisms of AGN and the relation to
host galaxy evolution. Here we investigate the relationship between the HI
properties of these galaxies, their environment, their stellar distribution and
their AGN type. The large-scale HI morphology of each galaxy is classified as
ringed, spiral, or centrally concentrated; comparison of the resulting
morphological classification with AGN type reveals that ring structures are
significantly more common in LINER than in Seyfert host galaxies, suggesting a
time evolution of the AGN activity together with the redistribution of the
neutral gas. Dynamically disturbed HI disks are also more prevalent in LINER
host galaxies than in Seyfert host galaxies. While several galaxies are
surrounded by companions (some with associated HI emission), there is no
correlation between the presence of companions and the AGN type
(Seyfert/LINER).Comment: 54 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in AJ. The
full-resolution version is available at
http://www.mpia.de/homes/haan/research.htm
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