413 research outputs found
Spectroscopy of Comet P/Encke in 1980 - 1981
Digital spectroscopic scans of P/Comets Encke, Stephan-Oterma, and Gunn were obtained with a sky-subtraction scanner system. Quantiative fluxes for the cometary emission bands of CN, C3, C2, NH2, and the 'D OI red auroral line are presented for P/Encke. The most straight-forward and model-independent line flux to interpret is the lambda lambda 6300, 6364 forbidden oxygen doublet. After an NH2 blending correction, the oxygen production rate may be directly measured from the Lick small-aperture fluxes. The oxygen production rates increased rapidly with decreasing heliocentric distance for both P/Encke and P/Stephan-Oterma. A rough power-law exponent in r with n = approximately -2.5 describes the change in oxygen production for P/Encke. Compared to the water production rates inferred from IUE satellite spectra showing the lambda 3080 OH band, these oxygen production rates are consistently lower by a factor of 11. This implies a common origin for the two species; H2O is the likely sole OI ID parent
Ultraviolet observations of M32, a cosmological comparison
The average spectral energy distribution for a sample of 3200 A. Spectral synthesis indicates that elliptical galaxies are most likely older than 9 Gyrs. The ultraviolet flux is consistent with a population of red horizontal branch stars, as those present in metal-rich globular clusters. Data for distant (Z approximately 1) first ranked cluster galaxies show indications of spectral evolution
The ultraviolet spectra of early type galaxies
The average spectral energy distribution for a sample of bright elliptical galaxies is presented in the range lambda lambda 2000 to 3200 A. Spectral synthesis indicates that elliptical galaxies are most likely older than 9 Gyrs. The ultraviolet flux is consistent with a population of red horizontal branch stars, as those present in metal rich globular clusters. Data for distant first ranked cluster galaxies show indications of spectral evolution
A high-Resolution Catalog of Cometary Emission Lines
Using high-resolution spectra obtained with the Hamilton echelle spectrograph at Lick Observatory, we have constructed a catalog of emission lines observed in comets Swift-Tuttle and Brorsen-Metcalf. The spectra cover the range between 3800 Å and 9900 Å with a spectral resolution of λ/Δλ~42000. In the spectra, we catalog 2997 emission lines of which we identify 2438. We find cometary lines due to H, O, C_2, CN, NH_2, C_3, H_2O^+, CH, and CH^+. We list 559 unidentified lines compiled from the two spectra and comment on possibilities for their origins
Non-detection of the OH Meinel system in comet P/Swift-Tuttle
We report a search for emissions from the OH Meinel system in high-resolution near-infrared spectra of comet P/Swift-Tuttle. Because of the large cometary heliocentric velocity and high resolution of the spectrograph, the cometary lines should be well separated from the bright OH sky lines. Contrary to the findings of Tozzi et al. (1994) - who report seeing cometary OH at intensities comparable to the sky emissions in their low-resolution spectra - we find no OH in these spectra with an upper limit of 5% the value of the night sky lines. The non-detection of these cometary lines is consistent with theoretical calculations of expected emission strengths from prompt and fluorescent emission from cometary OH
Toward the application of metric size function in galactic evolution and cosmology
We have measured the metric size function η(r) defined by Petrosian on a limited sample of luminous distant galaxies, up to a redshift of 1.175. Although our investigation has a preliminary character, we find some evidence for the evolution of elliptical galaxies. Using the Ostriker-Hausman theoretical models, we place some constraints on the rates of dynamical evolution. The eta function appears to be an extremely sensitive probe for the investigation of galactic evolution and potentially useful in cosmology. Some problems and directions for future work are outlined
Comet Shoemaker‐Levy 9: No effect on the Io plasma torus
Observations of the Io plasma torus made before, during, and after the impact of Comet Shoemaker‐Levy 9 with Jupiter reveal no comet‐induced changes. Three weeks of high spectral‐resolution ground‐based visible spectroscopy show no changes larger than typical day‐to‐day variations in the torus densities, ion temperatures, or rotation velocities. Comparison with six months of identically obtained data from 1991 and 1992 also shows no differences
NICMOS Imaging of the Dusty Microjansky Radio Source VLA J123642+621331 at z = 4.424
We present the discovery of a radio galaxy at a likely redshift of z = 4.424
in one of the flanking fields of the Hubble Deep Field. Radio observations with
the VLA and MERLIN centered on the HDF yielded a complete sample of microjansky
radio sources, of which about 20% have no optical counterpart to I < 25 mag. In
this Letter, we address the possible nature of one of these sources, through
deep HST NICMOS images in the F110W (J) and F160W (H) filters. VLA
J123642+621331 has a single emission line at 6595-A, which we identify with
Lyman-alpha at z = 4.424. We argue that this faint (H = 23.9 mag), compact (r =
0.2 arcsec), red (I - K = 2.0) object is most likely a dusty, star-forming
galaxy with an embedded active nucleus.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal Letters. 11 pages,
4 figures, uses aastex v5.0 and psfi
Reduction and analysis of photometric data on Comet Halley
The discovery that periodic variations in the brightness of Comet Halley were characterized by two unrelated frequencies implies that the nucleus is in a complex state of rotation. It either nutates as a result of the random addition of small torque perturbations accumulated over many perihelion passages, or the jet activity torques are so strong that it precesses wildly at each perihelion passage. To diagnose the state of nuclear rotation, researchers began a program to acquire photometric time series of the comet as it recedes from the sun. The intention is to observe the decay of the comet's atmosphere and then, when it is unemcumbered by the light of the coma, follow the light variation of the nucleus itself. The latter will be compared with preperihelion time series and the orientation of the nucleus at the time of Vega and Giotto flybys and an accurate rotational ephemeris constructed. Halley was observed on 38 nights during 1987 and approximately 21 nights in 1988. The comet moved from 5 AU to 8.5 AU during this time. The brightness of the coma was found to rapidly decrease in 1988 as the coma and cometary activity collapses. The magnitude in April 1988 was 19 mag (visual) and it is predicted that the nucleus itself will be the major contributor to the brightness in the 1988 and 1989 season
- …