748 research outputs found
Laudatores Temporis Acti, or Why Cosmology is Alive and Well - A Reply to Disney
A recent criticism of cosmological methodology and achievements by Disney
(2000) is assessed. Some historical and epistemological fallacies in the said
article have been highlighted. It is shown that---both empirically and
epistemologically---modern cosmology lies on sounder foundations than it is
portrayed. A brief historical account demonstrates that this form of
unsatisfaction with cosmology has had a long tradition, and rather meagre
results in the course of the XX century.Comment: 11 pages, no figures; a criticism of astro-ph/0009020; Gen. Rel.
Grav., accepted for publicatio
A New Strategy for Deep Wide-Field High Resolution Optical Imaging
We propose a new strategy for obtaining enhanced resolution (FWHM = 0.12
arcsec) deep optical images over a wide field of view. As is well known, this
type of image quality can be obtained in principle simply by fast guiding on a
small (D = 1.5m) telescope at a good site, but only for target objects which
lie within a limited angular distance of a suitably bright guide star. For high
altitude turbulence this 'isokinetic angle' is approximately 1 arcminute. With
a 1 degree field say one would need to track and correct the motions of
thousands of isokinetic patches, yet there are typically too few sufficiently
bright guide stars to provide the necessary guiding information. Our proposed
solution to these problems has two novel features. The first is to use
orthogonal transfer charge-coupled device (OTCCD) technology to effectively
implement a wide field 'rubber focal plane' detector composed of an array of
cells which can be guided independently. The second is to combine measured
motions of a set of guide stars made with an array of telescopes to provide the
extra information needed to fully determine the deflection field. We discuss
the performance, feasibility and design constraints on a system which would
provide the collecting area equivalent to a single 9m telescope, a 1 degree
square field and 0.12 arcsec FWHM image quality.Comment: 46 pages, 22 figures, submitted to PASP, a version with higher
resolution images and other supplementary material can be found at
http://www.ifa.hawaii.edu/~kaiser/wfhr
A blind HI survey of the M81 group
Results are presented of the first blind HI survey of the M81 group of
galaxies. The data were taken as part of the HI Jodrell All Sky Survey
(HIJASS). The survey reveals several new aspects to the complex morphology of
the HI distribution in the group. All four of the known dwarf irregular (dIrr)
galaxies close to M81 can be unambiguously seen in the HIJASS data. Each forms
part of the complex tidal structure in the area. We suggest that at least three
of these galaxies may have formed recently from the tidal debris in which they
are embedded. The structure connecting M81 to NGC2976 is revealed as a single
tidal bridge of mass approx. 2.1 x 10^8 Msol and projected spatial extent
approx. 80 kpc. Two `spurs' of HI projecting from the M81 complex to lower
declinations are traced over a considerably larger spatial and velocity extent
than by previous surveys. The dwarf elliptical (dE) galaxies BK5N and Kar 64
lie at the spatial extremity of one of these features and appear to be
associated with it. We suggest that these may be the remnants of dIrrs which
has been stripped of gas and transmuted into dEs by close gravitational
encounters with NGC3077. The nucleated dE galaxy Kar 61 is unambiguously
detected in HI for the first time and has an HI mass of approx.10^8 Msol,
further confirming it as a dE/dIrr transitional object. HIJASS has revealed one
new possible group member, HIJASS J1021+6842. This object contains approx. 2 x
10^7 Msol of HI and lies approx.105arcmin from IC2574. It has no optical
counterpart on the Digital Sky Survey.Comment: To be published in Astrophysical Journal Letters 9 pages, including 3
figure
Planetary Nebulae as standard candles XI. Application to Spiral Galaxies
We report the results of an [O III] lambda 5007 survey for planetary nebulae
(PN) in three spiral galaxies: M101 (NGC 5457), M51 (NGC 5194/5195) and M96
(NGC 3368). By comparing on-band/off-band [O III] lambda 5007 images with
images taken in H-alpha and broadband R, we identify 65, 64 and 74 PN
candidates in each galaxy, respectively. From these data, an adopted M31
distance of 770 kpc, and the empirical planetary nebula luminosity function
(PNLF), we derive distances to M101, M51, and M96 of 7.7 +/- 0.5, 8.4 +/- 0.6,
and 9.6 +/- 0.6 Mpc. These observations demonstrate that the PNLF technique can
be successfully applied to late-type galaxies, and provide an important overlap
between the Population I and Population II distance scales. We also discuss
some special problems associated with using the PNLF in spiral galaxies,
including the effects of dust and the possible presence of [O III] bright
supernova remnants.Comment: 38 pages, TeX, with tables included but not figures. Uses epsf.tex
and kpnobasic.tex. To be published in the Astophysical Journal. Full paper is
available at http://www.astro.psu.edu/users/johnf/Text/research.htm
An Extragalactic HI Cloud with No Optical Counterpart?
We report the discovery, from the HI Parkes All-Sky Survey (HIPASS), of an
isolated cloud of neutral hydrogen which we believe to be extragalactic. The HI
mass of the cloud (HIPASS J1712-64) is very low, 1.7 x 10^7 Msun, using an
estimated distance of ~3.2 Mpc. Most significantly, we have found no optical
companion to this object to very faint limits (mu(B)~ 27 mag arcsec^-2). HIPASS
J1712-64 appears to be a binary system similar to, but much less massive than,
HI 1225+01 (the Virgo HI Cloud) and has a size of at least 15 kpc. The mean
velocity dispersion, measured with the Australia Telescope Compact Array
(ATCA), is only 4 km/s for the main component and because of the weak or
non-existent star-formation, possibly reflects the thermal linewidth (T<2000 K)
rather than bulk motion or turbulence. The peak column density for HIPASS
J1712-64, from the combined Parkes and ATCA data, is only 3.5 x 10^19 cm^-2,
which is estimated to be a factor of two below the critical threshold for star
formation. Apart from its significantly higher velocity, the properties of
HIPASS J1712-64 are similar to the recently recognised class of Compact High
Velocity Clouds. We therefore consider the evidence for a Local Group or
Galactic origin, although a more plausible alternative is that HIPASS J1712-64
was ejected from the interacting Magellanic Cloud/Galaxy system at
perigalacticon ~ 2 x 10^8 yr ago.Comment: 23 pages, 7 figures, AJ accepte
The disruption of nearby galaxies by the Milky Way
Interactions between galaxies are common and are an important factor in
determining their physical properties such as position along the Hubble
sequence and star-formation rate. There are many possible galaxy interaction
mechanisms, including merging, ram-pressure stripping, gas compression,
gravitational interaction and cluster tides. The relative importance of these
mechanisms is often not clear, as their strength depends on poorly known
parameters such as the density, extent and nature of the massive dark halos
that surround galaxies. A nearby example of a galaxy interaction where the
mechanism is controversial is that between our own Galaxy and two of its
neighbours -- the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds. Here we present the first
results of a new HI survey which provides a spectacular view of this
interaction. In addition to the previously known Magellanic Stream, which
trails 100 degrees behind the Clouds, the new data reveal a counter-stream
which lies in the opposite direction and leads the motion of the Clouds. This
result supports the gravitational model in which leading and trailing streams
are tidally torn from the body of the Magellanic Clouds.Comment: 17 pages with 5 figures in gif format, scheduled for publication in
the August 20th, 1998 issue of Natur
Disk Galaxies in the Outer Local Supercluster: Optical CCD Surface Photometry and Distribution of Galaxy Disk Parameters
We report new B-band CCD surface photometry on a sample of 76 disk galaxies
brighter than B_T = 14.5 mag in the Uppsala General Catalogue of Galaxies,
which are confined within a volume located in the outer part of the Local
Supercluster. With our earlier published I-band CCD and high S/N-ratio 21cm HI
data (Lu et al. 1993), this paper completes our optical surface photometry
campaign on this galaxy sample. As an application of this data set, the B-band
photometry is used here to illustrate two selection effects which have been
somewhat overlooked in the literature, but which may be important in deriving
the distribution function of disk central surface brightness (CSB) of disk
galaxies from a diameter or/and flux limited sample: a Malmquist-type bias
against disk galaxies with small disk scale lengths (DSL) at a given CSB; and a
disk inclination dependent selection effect that may, for example, bias toward
inclined disks near the threshold of a diameter limited selection if disks are
not completely opaque in optical. Taking into consideration these selection
effects, we present a method of constructing a volume sampling function and a
way to interpret the derived distribution function of CSB and DSL. Application
of this method to our galaxy sample implies that if galaxy disks are optically
thin, CSB and DSL may well be correlated in the sense that, up to an
inclination-corrected limiting CSB of about 24.5 mag per square arcsec that is
adequately probed by our galaxy sample, the DSL distribution of galaxies with a
lower CSB may have a longer tail toward large values unless the distribution of
disk galaxies as a function of CSB rises rapidly toward faint values.Comment: 27 pages including 9 figures and 2 tables. To appear in the October
20, 1998 issue of the Astrophysical Journa
New Galaxies Discovered in the First Blind HI Survey of the Centaurus A Group
We have commenced a 21-cm survey of the entire southern sky (\delta < 0
degrees, -1200 km/s < v < 12700 km/s) which is ''blind'', i.e. unbiased by
previous optical information. In the present paper we report on the results of
a pilot project which is based on data from this all-sky survey. The project
was carried out on an area of 600 square degrees centred on the nearby
Centaurus A (Cen A) group of galaxies at a mean velocity of v ~ 500 km/s. This
was recently the subject of a separate and thorough optical survey.
We found 10 new group members to add to the 21 galaxies already known in the
Cen A group: five of these are previously uncatalogued galaxies, while five
were previously catalogued but not known to be associated with the group.
We found optical counterparts for all the HI detections, most of them
intrinsically very faint low surface brightness dwarfs. The new group members
add approximately 6% to the HI mass of the group and 4% to its light. The HI
mass function, derived from all the known group galaxies in the interval 10^7
\Msun of HI to 10^9 \Msun of HI, has a faint-end slope of 1.30 +/- 0.15,
allowing us to rule out a slope of 1.7 at 95% confidence. Even if the number in
the lowest mass bin is increased by 50%, the slope only increases to 1.45 +/-
0.15.Comment: 19 pages Latex, 6 figures (Fig. 2 in four parts, Fig.5 in two parts).
To appear in The Astrophysical Journal (Vol. 524, October 1999
HIPASS Detection of an Intergalactic Gas Cloud in the NGC 2442 Group
We report the discovery, from the HI Parkes All-Sky Survey (HIPASS), of a gas
cloud associated with the asymmetric spiral galaxy NGC 2442. This object,
designated HIPASS J0731-69, contains ~10^9 M_sun of HI, or nearly one-third as
much atomic gas as NGC 2442 itself. No optical counterpart to any part of
HIPASS J0731-69 has yet been identified, consistent with the gas being diffuse,
and with its stream-like kinematics. If the gas in HIPASS J0731-69 was once
part of NGC 2442, then it was most likely a fairly recent tidal encounter with
a moderately massive companion which tore it loose, although the possibility of
ram-pressure stripping cannot be ruled out. This discovery highlights the
potential of the HIPASS data for yielding new clues to the nature of some of
the best-known galaxies in the local universe.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, uses "emulateapj5.sty". Accepted for publication
in ApJ, Vol. 555, 1 July 2001. Figs 1 and 2 included as JPE
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