28 research outputs found
Spatially Resolved Far-Ultraviolet Spectroscopy of the Nuclear Region of NGC 1068
We carry out high-resolution FUSE spectroscopy of the nuclear region of NGC
1068. The first set of spectra was obtained with a 30" square aperture that
collects all emission from the narrow-line region. The data reveal a strong
broad OVI component of FWHM ~3500 kms-1 and two narrow OVI 1031/1037 components
of ~350 kms-1. The CIII 977 and NIII 991 emission lines in this spectrum can be
fitted with a narrow component of FWHM ~1000 kms-1 and a broad one of ~2500
kms-1. Another set of seven spatially resolved spectra were made using a long
slit of 1.25" X 20", at steps of ~1" along the axis of the emission-line cone.
We find that (1) Major emission lines in the FUSE wavelength range consist of a
broad and a narrow component; (2) There is a gradient in the velocity field for
the narrow OVI component of ~200 kms-1 from ~2" southwest of the nucleus to ~4"
northeast. A similar pattern is also observed with the broad OVI component,
with a gradient of ~3000 kms-1. These are consistent with the HST/STIS findings
and suggest a biconical structure in which the velocity field is mainly radial
outflow; (3) A major portion of the CIII and NIII line flux is produced in the
compact core. They are therefore not effective temperature diagnostics for the
conical region; and (4) The best-fitted UV continuum suggests virtually no
reddening, and the HeII 1085/1640 ratio suggests a consistently low extinction
factor across the cone.Comment: To appear in the Astrophysical Journal. 37 pages with 12 figure
FUSE search for 10^5-10^6 K gas in the rich clusters of galaxies Abell 2029 and Abell 3112
Recent Chandra and XMM X-ray observations of rich clusters of galaxies have
shown that the amount of hot gas which is cooling below ~1 keV is generally
more modest than previous estimates. Yet, the real level of the cooling flows,
if any, remains to be clarified by making observations sensitive to different
temperature ranges. As a follow-up of the FUSE observations reporting a
positive detection of the OVI doublet at 1032, 1038 Angstrom in the cluster of
galaxies Abell 2597, which provided the first direct evidence for ~3x10^5 K gas
in a cluster of galaxies, we have carried out sensitive spectroscopy of two
rich clusters, Abell 2029 and Abell 3112 (z~0.07) located behind low HI
columns. In neither of these clusters could we detect the OVI doublet, yielding
fairly stringent limits of ~27 Msun yr-1 (Abell 2029) and ~25 Msun yr-1 (Abell
3112) to the cooling flow rates using the 10^5-10^6 K gas as a tracer. The
non-detections support the emerging picture that the cooling-flow rates are
much more modest than deduced from earlier X-ray observations.Comment: Astronomy & Astrophysics, in pres
ACCESS: Design and Sub-System Performance
Establishing improved spectrophotometric standards is important for a broad range of missions and is relevant to many astrophysical problems. ACCESS, "Absolute Color Calibration Experiment for Standard Stars", is a series of rocket-borne sub-orbital missions and ground-based experiments designed to enable improvements in the precision of the astrophysical flux scale through the transfer of absolute laboratory detector standards from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) to a network of stellar standards with a calibration accuracy of 1% and a spectral resolving power of 500 across the 0.35 -1.7 micrometer bandpass