713 research outputs found
Searching for Stars in Compact High-Velocity Clouds. II
We address the hypothesis that High Velocity Clouds correspond to the
"missing" dwarf galaxies of the Local Group predicted by cosmological
simulations. To this end, we present optical and near-infrared photometry of
five additional High Velocity Clouds, one of which produces Lyman series
absorption on the sight line towards the Quasar Ton S210, with sufficient
resolution and sensitivity to enable the detection of an associated stellar
content. We do not detect significant stellar populations intrinsic to any of
the five clouds. In combination with the results from our paper I, which had
yielded non detections of stellar content in another five cases, we find that
there is a 50% chance of getting a null result in ten trials if fewer than 7%
of all High Velocity Clouds contain stars. We conclude that the population of
High Velocity Clouds is an unlikely repository for the "missing" dwarfs of the
Local Group.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. submitted to MNRA
Searching for Stars in Compact High-Velocity Clouds. I First Results from VLT and 2MASS
We investigate the hypothesis that compact high-velocity clouds (CHVC) are
the "missing" dwarf galaxies of the Local Group, by searching them for
populations of resolved stars. To this end we conducted two distinct tests
based on optical and near-infrared single-star photometry. The optical and the
near-infrared experiments complement one another; the optical data help us to
rule out distant populations but they are restricted to the central regions of
the gas distributions, whereas the near-infrared photometry allows us to set
limits on nearby populations spread over the typical cloud size. First, we
discuss deep optical single-star photometry of five CHVCs in the V and I
filters, obtained with the FORS instrument at the Very Large Telecope (VLT). We
find that their optical colour-magnitude diagrams are indistinguishable from
that of a population of Galactic stars, and attribute all of the resolved stars
to Galactic foreground. We present simulations which address the question of
how much of a "normal" dwarf-galaxy type population we might hide in the data.
A Kolmogorov-Smirnov test allows us to set very stringent limits on the absence
of a resolved stellar population in CHVCs. Second, we also culled near infrared
single-star photometry in the J, H, and K_S bands for four of the CHVCs from
the Two Micron All Sky Survey (2MASS). The infrared data do not reveal any
stellar contents in the CHVCs which resembles that of nearby dwarf galaxies
either, and are explained with Galactic foreground as well. We interpret our
null detections to indicate that the five CHVCs investigated by us do not host
an associated stellar content which is similar to that of the known dwarf
galaxies of the Local Group. These CHVCs are very likely pure hydrogen clouds
in which no star formation has taken place over cosmic time.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication by MNRA
Coma imaging of comet P/Brorsen-Metcalf at Calar Alto in late July to mid August 1989
Comet P/Brorsen-Metcalf was observed on 1989/07/28+30 and on 1989/08/04+12(+14) with the 3.5 m telescope and the 0.8 m Schmidt camera at Calar Alto/Spain. The images exhibit a narrow plasma tail pointing into anti-solar direction. On 1989/07/30 a triple tail was found which can be interpreted as tail ray event. The coma isophotes show prominent asymmetries with the nucleus located on the tailward side of the isophote foci and with a slightly higher brightness in the Northern Hemisphere of the coma. A strong curved jet feature was detected in the coma on 1989/07/30. The jet extended at least 30,000 km into the sunward coma hemisphere. The rotation period of about 1.3 days, estimated from the curvature of the coma jet, needs verification by other observations
A deep i-selected multi-waveband galaxy catalogue in the COSMOS field
In this paper we present a deep and homogeneous i-band selected
multi-waveband catalogue in the COSMOS field covering an area of about 0.7
square-degree. Our catalogue with a formal 50 percent completeness limit for
point sources of i~26.7 comprises about 290.000 galaxies with information in 8
passbands. We combine publicly available u, B, V, r, i, z, and K data with
proprietary imaging in H band. We discuss in detail the observations, the data
reduction, and the photometric properties of the H-band data. We estimate
photometric redshifts for all the galaxies in the catalogue. A comparison with
162 spectroscopic redshifts in the redshift range 0 < z < 3 shows that the
achieved accuracy of the photometric redshifts is (Delta_z / (z_spec+1)) ~0.035
with only ~2 percent outliers. We derive absolute UV magnitudes and investigate
the evolution of the luminosity function evaluated in the rest-frame UV at 1500
Angstrom. There is a good agreement between the LFs derived here and the LFs
derived in the FORS Deep Field. We see a similar brightening of M_star and a
decrease of phi_star with redshift. The catalogue including the photometric
redshift information is made publicly available.Comment: 20 pages, 17 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS; high
resulution paper: http://www.mpe.mpg.de/~gabasch/COSMOS/cosmos.pd
Observational Test of Environmental Effects on The Local Group Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxies
In this paper, we examine whether tidal forces exerted by the Galaxy or M31
have an influence on the Local Group dwarf spheroidal galaxies (dSphs) which
are their companions. We focus on the surface brightness profiles of the dSphs,
especially their core radii because it is suggested based on the numerical
simulations that tidal disturbance can make core radii extended. We examine the
correlation for the dSphs between the distances from their parent galaxy (the
Galaxy or M31) and the compactnesses of their surface brightness profiles by
using a parameter ``C'' defined newly in this paper. Consequently, we find no
significant correlation. We make some remarks on the origin of this result by
considering three possible scenarios; tidal picture, dark matter picture, and
heterogeneity of the group of dSphs, each of which has been often discussed to
understand fundamental properties and formation processes of dSphs.Comment: 14 pages LaTeX, 2 PostScript figures, to appear in ApJ Letter
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