472 research outputs found

    Diffuse Nebulae at High Galactic Latitudes

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    The nature of the diffuse nebulae at high galactic latitudes is discussed. Although these nebulae show Hβ in emission, evidence is presented that they are reflection nebulae illuminated by the integrated light of the Galaxy. Observational evidence for this suggestion is obtained by narrow-band photometry of external spiral galaxies with large entrance apertures. In the integrated spectra of spiral disks, we find that Hα is in emission

    Limits on the C^(12)/C^(13)Ratio in Metal-Deficient Stars

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    Lower limits for the ratio C^(12)/C^(13) have been determined for eight metal-deficient stars. These limits are inconsistent with the predictions of nearly all of the universal models considered by Wagoner, Fowler, and Hoyle (1967) unless at least one generation of massive, rapidly evolving stars existed before the formation of any of the program stars

    The range of V - R colors for a cluster of E and S0 galaxies as a function of redshift

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    The expected (V - R) color distribution for a centrally condensed, relaxed cluster of E and S0 galaxies has been calculated as a function of redshift. Because of the differences in the ultraviolet spectra of E and S0 galaxies, which are correlated with absolute magnitude, the spread in (V - R) colors for such a cluster becomes increasingly wide for increasing redshift. This effect becomes pronounced for redshifts of 0.4 and beyond. Thus evidence for the color evolution of cluster galaxies will be seen as an additional broadening of the color distribution

    High resolution observations of the L1551 bipolar outflow

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    The nearby dark cloud Lynds 1551 contains one of the closest examples of a well-collimated bipolar molecular outflow. This source has the largest angular size of any known outflow and was the first bipolar outflow to be detected. The outflow originates from a low-luminosity young stellar object, IRS-5. Optical and radio continuum observations show the presence of a highly collimated, ionized stellar wind orginating from close to IRS-5 and aligned with the molecular outflow. However, we have little information on the actual mechanism that generates the stellar wind and collimates it into opposed jets. The Very Large Array (VLA) observations indicate that the winds originate within 10(15) cm of IRS-5, unfortunately at a size scale difficult to resolve. For these reasons, observations of the structure and dynamics of the hypersonic molecular gas may provide valuable information on the origin and evolution of these outflows. In addition, the study of the impact of the outflowing gas on the surrounding molecular material is essential to understand the consequence these outflows have on the evolution and star formation history of the entire cloud. Moriarty-Schieven et al. (1986) obtained a oversampled map of the CO emission of a portion of both the blueshifted and redshifted outflows in LI551 using Five College Radio Astronomy Observatory 14 m telescope. The oversampled maps have been reconstructed to an effective angular resolution of 20 arcsec using a maximum entropy algorithm. A continuation of the study of Moriarty-Schieven et al. is presented. The entire L1551 outflow has now been mapped at 12 arcsec sampling requiring roughly 4000 spectra. This data has been constructed to 20 arcsec resolution to provide the first high resolution picture of the entire L1551 outflow. This new data has shown that the blueshifted lobe is more extended than previously thought and has expanded downstream sufficiently to break out of the dense molecular cloud, but the redshifted outflow is still confined within the molecular cloud. Details of the structure and kinematics of the high velocity gas are used to test the various models of the origin and evolution of outflows

    Absorption line series and autoionization resonance structure analysis in the ultraviolet spectrum of Sr I

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    Photoelectric spectrometer to measure absorption line series and autoionization resonance in ultraviolet spectrum of strontium vapo

    High spatial-resolution IRAS images of M51

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    High spatial-resolution (approx. equal to 30 seconds) images of M51 in the four Infrared Astronomy Satellite (IRAS) bands (12, 25, 60, and 100 microns) have been obtained. The spatial variation in flux in all four bands is coincident with the spiral features seen in H alpha and 6 cm with a few exceptions. In the nuclear region (4 minutes) the position of the peak of maximum intensity shifts in relation to the visual nucleus: it is coincident with the nucleus at 12 microns, shifts approximately 45 seconds to south-southwest, and is 45 seconds northwest of the nucleus at 60 and 100 microns

    An albedo map of P/Halley on 13 March 1986

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    An albedo map is presented of comet Halley from a 10 micrometer image taken from the Wyoming Infrared Observatory on 13 Mar. 1986, and a 7311 A CCD image taken from the Anglo-Australian Telescope about an hour later. To construct this map, the CCD image was first converted from 0.49 arcsec/pixel to 1 arcsec/pixel to match the scale of the 10 micron image, then both were calibrated in lambda F sub lambda units. According to the albedo map, most of the inner coma of Halley lies between gamma = 0.04 and 0.08. The overall smoothness of the map is remarkable considering the large dynamic range of the optical and IR maps, and the differences in spatial resolution and image processing

    A correlation between infrared excess and period for Mira variables

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    The [8.7]-[11.4] infrared color is found to increase monotonically with increasing period for a sample of 41 Mira variables. We conclude that mass loss is not a stochastic process and that for any Mira variable the rate of mass loss is directly linked to the parameters which dictate the period of that variable

    Diffuse Nebulae at High Galactic Latitudes

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    The nature of the diffuse nebulae at high galactic latitudes is discussed. Although these nebulae show Hβ in emission, evidence is presented that they are reflection nebulae illuminated by the integrated light of the Galaxy. Observational evidence for this suggestion is obtained by narrow-band photometry of external spiral galaxies with large entrance apertures. In the integrated spectra of spiral disks, we find that Hα is in emission

    Optical/IR from ground

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    Optical/infrared (O/IR) astronomy in the 1990's is reviewed. The following subject areas are included: research environment; science opportunities; technical development of the 1980's and opportunities for the 1990's; and ground-based O/IR astronomy outside the U.S. Recommendations are presented for: (1) large scale programs (Priority 1: a coordinated program for large O/IR telescopes); (2) medium scale programs (Priority 1: a coordinated program for high angular resolution; Priority 2: a new generation of 4-m class telescopes); (3) small scale programs (Priority 1: near-IR and optical all-sky surveys; Priority 2: a National Astrometric Facility); and (4) infrastructure issues (develop, purchase, and distribute optical CCDs and infrared arrays; a program to support large optics technology; a new generation of large filled aperture telescopes; a program to archive and disseminate astronomical databases; and a program for training new instrumentalists
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