1,213 research outputs found
Rest Frame Optical Spectra of Lyman Break Galaxies: Other Lensing Arcs around MS1512-cB58
We have obtained near-infrared spectra of two images of the galaxy at z=2.72 which is gravitationally lensed by the foreground cluster MS1512+36. The brighter arc, cB58, is an image of only the nucleus and the southern half of the background galaxy, while the fainter image, A2, encompasses the entire background galaxy. Thus the gravitational lensing provides spatial resolution on a smaller scale than is routinely available by other methods.
Our observations indicate no evidence for any systematic rotational velocity gradient across the face of this galaxy. The nucleus and outer regions of the galaxy do not differ in their gas reddening or excitation level, based on the identical Hα/5007 ratios. cB58 (which is more dominated by the nucleus) has relatively stronger continuum emission, perhaps because of a higher ratio of old to young stars, compared to the outer parts of the galaxy.
A second emission line source, denoted as K1, at a slightly lower redshift was serendipitously detected in the slit. It appears to be the gravitationally lensed image of another background galaxy in the same group as cB58
Using Narrow Band Photometry to Detect Young Brown Dwarfs in IC348
We report the discovery of a population of young brown dwarf candidates in
the open star cluster IC348 and the development of a new spectroscopic
classification technique using narrow band photometry. Observations were made
using FLITECAM, the First Light Camera for SOFIA, at the 3-m Shane Telescope at
Lick Observatory. FLITECAM is a new 1-5 micron camera with an 8 arcmin field of
view. Custom narrow band filters were developed to detect absorption features
of water vapor (at 1.495 microns) and methane (at 1.66 microns) characteristic
of brown dwarfs. These filters enable spectral classification of stars and
brown dwarfs without spectroscopy. FLITECAM's narrow and broadband photometry
was verified by examining the color-color and color-magnitude characteristics
of stars whose spectral type and reddening was known from previous surveys.
Using our narrow band filter photometry method, it was possible to identify an
object measured with a signal-to-noise ratio of 20 or better to within +/-3
spectral class subtypes for late-type stars. With this technique, very deep
images of the central region of IC348 (H ~ 20.0) have identified 18 sources as
possible L or T dwarf candidates. Out of these 18, we expect that between 3 - 6
of these objects are statistically likely to be background stars, with the
remainder being true low-mass members of the cluster. If confirmed as cluster
members then these are very low-mass objects (~5 Mjupiter). We also describe
how two additional narrow band filters can improve the contrast between M, L,
and T dwarfs as well as provide a means to determine the reddening of an
individual object.Comment: 43 pages, 17 figures. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journal 27 June 200
Near-Infrared Observations of the Environments of Radio Quiet QSOs at z >~ 1
We present the results of an infrared survey of QSO fields at z=0.95, 0.995
and 1.5. Each z<1 field was imaged to typical continuum limits of J=20.5,
Kprime=19 (5 sigma), and line fluxes of 1.3E10{-16}ergs/cm^2/s (1 sigma)in a 1%
interference filter. 16 fields were chosen with z~0.95 targets, 14 with z~0.995
and 6 with z~1.5. A total area of 0.05 square degrees was surveyed, and two
emission-line objects were found. We present the infrared and optical
photometry of these objects. Optical spectroscopy has confirmed the redshift of
one object (at z=0.989) and is consistent with the other object having a
similar redshift. We discuss the density of such objects across a range of
redshifts from this survey and others in the literature. We also present
number-magnitude counts for galaxies in the fields of radio quiet QSOs,
supporting the interpretation that they exist in lower density environments
than their radio loud counterparts. The J-band number counts are among the
first to be published in the J=16--20.Comment: 34 pages, including 12 figures; accepted for publication in the Ap
Studies in astronomical narrow band spectropolarimetry
Preface available: p. 1-
Performance of the HgCdTe detector for MOSFIRE, an imager and multi-object spectrometer for Keck Observatory
MOSFIRE is a new multi-object near-infrared spectrometer for the Keck 1 telescope with a spectral resolving power of R~3500 for a 0.7″ slit (2.9 pixels). The detector is a substrate-removed 2K × 2K HAWAII 2-RG HgCdTe array from Teledyne Imaging Sensors with a cut-off wavelength of 2.5 μm and an operational temperature of 77K. Spectroscopy of faint objects sets the requirement for low dark current and low noise. MOSFIRE is also an infrared camera with a 6.9′ field of view projected onto the detector with 0.18″ pixel sampling. Broad-band imaging drives the requirement for 32-channel readout and MOSFIREs fast camera optics implies the need for a very at detector. In this paper we report the final performance of the detector selected for MOSFIRE. The array is operated using the SIDECAR ASIC chip inside the MOSFIRE dewar and v2.3 of the HxRG software. Dark current plus instrument background is measured at <0.008 ē s^(−1) pixel^−1 on average. Multiple Correlated Double Sampling (MCDS) and Up-The-Ramp (UTR) sampling are both available. A read noise of <5ē rms is achieved with MCDS 16 and the lowest noise of 3ē rms occurs for 64 samples. Charge persistence depends on exposure level and shows a large gradient across this detector. However, the decay time constant is always ~660 seconds. Linearity and stability are also discussed
The Counter Arc to MS1512-cB58 and a Companion Galaxy
We present near-infrared spectra of ``A2'', the primary counter arc to the
gravitationally lensed galaxy MS1512-cB58. The spectra showredshifted H-alpha,
[NII], [OIII], and H-beta at z=2.728 +/- 0.001. We observe the same
H-alpha/[OIII] ratio as cB58, which together with the redshift confirms that A2
is indeed another image of a single background galaxy. Published lensing
reconstruction reports that A2 is a magnification of the entire source, while
cB58 is an image of only a part. At marginal significance, A2 shows higher line
to continuum ratios than cB58 (by a factor of about 2), suggesting a
non-uniform ratio of young to old stars across the galaxy. We observe a second
emission line source in the slit. This object, ``W5'', is predicted to be a
lensed image of another galaxy at a redshift similar to cB58. W5 is blueshifted
from cB58 by about 400 km/s and has a significantly lower H-alpha/[OIII] ratio,
confirming that it is an image of a different background galaxy in a group with
cB58. The H-alpha emission line in W5 implies a star formation rate of 6
Msun/yr (H_0 = 70 km/s/Mpc, Omega_M=0.3, Omega_L=0.7), after correcting for
lensing magnification.Comment: Accepted by ApJ. 18 pages including 5 figure
HST/NICMOS Observations of Massive Stellar Clusters Near the Galactic Center
We report Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Near-infrared Camera and Multi-object
Spectrometer (NICMOS) observations of the Arches and Quintuplet clusters, two
extraordinary young clusters near the Galactic Center. For the first time, we
have identified main sequence stars in the Galactic Center with initial masses
well below 10 Msun. We present the first determination of the initial mass
function (IMF) for any population in the Galactic Center, finding an IMF slope
which is significantly more positive (Gamma approx -0.65) than the average for
young clusters elsewhere in the Galaxy (Gamma approx -1.4). The apparent
turnoffs in the color-magnitude diagrams suggest cluster ages which are
consistent with the ages implied by the mixture of spectral types in the
clusters; we find tau(age) approx 2+/-1 Myr for the Arches cluster, and
tau(age) approx 4+/-1 Myr for the Quintuplet. We estimate total cluster masses
by adding the masses of observed stars down to the 50% completeness limit, and
then extrapolating down to a lower mass cutoff of 1 Msun. Using this method, we
find > 10^4 Msun for the total mass of the Arches cluster. Such a determination
for the Quintuplet cluster is complicated by the double-valued mass-magnitude
relationship for clusters with ages > 3 Myr. We find a lower limit of 6300 Msun
for the total cluster mass, and suggest a best estimate of twice this value
which accounts for the outlying members of the cluster. Both clusters have
masses which place them as the two most massive clusters in the Galaxy.Comment: accepted by ApJ higher resolution versions of figures 1 and 2 can be
found at: ftp://quintup.astro.ucla.edu/nicmos1
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