46 research outputs found
The Asymmetric Wind in M82
We have obtained detailed imaging Fabry-Perot observations of the nearby
galaxy M82, in order to understand the physical association between the
high-velocity outflow and the starburst nucleus. The observed velocities of the
emitting gas in M82 reveal a bipolar outflow of material, originating from the
bright starburst regions in the galaxy's inner disk, but misaligned with
respect to the galaxy spin axis. The deprojected outflow velocity increases
with radius from 525 to 655 km/s. Spectral lines show double components in the
centers of the outflowing lobes, with the H-alpha line split by ~300 km/s over
a region almost a kiloparsec in size. The filaments are not simple surfaces of
revolution, nor is the emission distributed evenly over the surfaces. We model
these lobes as a composite of cylindrical and conical structures, collimated in
the inner ~500 pc but expanding at a larger opening angle of ~25 degrees beyond
that radius. We compare our kinematic model with simulations of
starburst-driven winds in which disk material surrounding the source is
entrained by the wind. The data also reveal a remarkably low [NII]/H-alpha
ratio in the region of the outflow, indicating that photoionization by the
nuclear starburst may play a significant role in the excitation of the optical
filament gas, particularly near the nucleus.Comment: 42 pages AASTeX with 16 figures; accepted for publication in ApJ;
figures reformatted for better printin
The Circumstellar Disk of the Butterfly Star in Taurus
We present a model of the circumstellar environment of the so-called
``Butterfly Star'' in Taurus (IRAS 04302+2247). The appearance of this young
stellar object is dominated by a large circumstellar disk seen edge-on and the
light scattering lobes above the disk. The model is based on multi-wavelength
continuum observations: Millimeter maps and high-resolution near-infrared
images obtained with HST/NICMOS.
It was found that the disk and envelope parameters are comparable with those
of the circumstellar environment of other young stellar objects. A main result
is that the dust properties must be different in the circumstellar disk and in
the envelope: While a grain size distribution with grain radii up to 100 micron
is required to reproduce the millimeter observations of the disk, the envelope
is dominated by smaller grains similar to those of the interstellar medium.
Preprint with high figure quality available at:
http://spider.ipac.caltech.edu/staff/swolf/homepage/public/preprints/i04302.psComment: 32 pages, 9 figure
The Star Formation History of the Disk of the Starburst galaxy M82
Spectroscopic, photometric and dynamical data of the inner 3 kpc part of the
starburst galaxy M82 are analyzed in order to investigate the star formation
history of the stellar disk. The long-slit spectra along the major axis are
dominated by Balmer absorption lines in the region outside the nuclear
starburst all the way up to ~3.5 scalelengths (mu_B=22 mag/arcsec**2). Single
Stellar Population (SSP) spectra of age 0.4-1.0 Gyr match well the observed
spectra in the 1-3 kpc zone, with a mean age of the stellar population
marginally higher in the outer parts. The mass in these populations, along with
that in the gas component, make up for the inferred dynamical mass in the same
annular zone for a Kroupa initial mass function, with a low mass cut-off
m_l=0.4 Msun. The observed ratio of the abundances of alpha elements with
respect to Fe, is also consistent with the idea that almost all the stars in
M82 disk formed in a burst of short duration (0.3 Gyr) around 0.8 Gyr ago. We
find that the optical/near infrared colors and their gradients in the disk are
determined by the reddening with visual extinction exceeding 1 mag even in the
outer parts of the disk, where there is apparently no current star formation.
The disk-wide starburst activity was most likely triggered by the interaction
of M82 with its massive neighbor M81 around 1~Gyr ago. The properties of the
disk of M82 very much resemble the properties of the disks of luminous compact
blue galaxies seen at 0.2-1.0 redshift.Comment: 7 pages, Accepted for publication in Ap
Milestones in the Observations of Cosmic Magnetic Fields
Magnetic fields are observed everywhere in the universe. In this review, we
concentrate on the observational aspects of the magnetic fields of Galactic and
extragalactic objects. Readers can follow the milestones in the observations of
cosmic magnetic fields obtained from the most important tracers of magnetic
fields, namely, the star-light polarization, the Zeeman effect, the rotation
measures (RMs, hereafter) of extragalactic radio sources, the pulsar RMs, radio
polarization observations, as well as the newly implemented sub-mm and mm
polarization capabilities.
(Another long paragraph is omitted due to the limited space here)Comment: Invited Review (ChJA&A); 32 pages. Sorry if your significant
contributions in this area were not mentioned. Published pdf & ps files (with
high quality figures) now availble at http://www.chjaa.org/2002_2_4.ht