242 research outputs found
SCUBA Observations of NGC 1275
Deep SCUBA observations of NGC 1275 at 450 micron and 850 micron along with
the application of deconvolution algorithms have permitted us to separate the
strong core emission in this galaxy from the fainter extended emission around
it. The core has a steep spectral index and is likely due primarily to the AGN.
The faint emission has a positive spectral index and is clearly due to extended
dust in a patchy distribution out to a radius of 20 kpc from the
nucleus. These observations have now revealed that a large quantity of dust,
6 10 , 2 orders of magnitude larger than that
inferred from previous optical absorption measurements, exists in this galaxy.
We estimate the temperature of this dust to be 20 K (using an emissivity
index of = 1.3) and the gas/dust ratio to be 360. These values are
typical of spiral galaxies. The dust emission correlates spatially with the hot
X-ray emitting gas which may be due to collisional heating of broadly
distributed dust by electrons. Since the destruction timescale is short, the
dust cannot be replenished by stellar mass loss and must be externally
supplied, either via the infalling galaxy or the cooling flow itself.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures. Figure 4 is colou
Discovery of PAHs in the Halo of NGC 5907
We have used sensitive archival data from the Infrared Space Observatory
(ISO) to make maps of the edge-on low SFR galaxy, NGC 5907, in 6 different MIR
bands: LW2, LW5, LW6, LW7, LW8, and LW10, covering the spectrum from 6.5 to
15.0 microns and including several narrow bands that isolate the infrared
aromatic spectral features commonly referred to as PAHs. Most of the MIR
emission is dominated by PAHs and it is likely that emission from VSGs
contribute only negligibly except in the broad IRAS-equivalent band. The flux
ratios are typical of galaxies with low SFRs or quiesent regions within
galaxies (e.g M~83) and a very high PAH/continuum ratio is observed. The PAH
emission follows the CO distribution and also shows some correlation within the
disk with the lambda 850 micron distribution. However, the PAH emission also
reaches larger galactocentric radii than the CO and other correlations suggest
that the PAHs are also more widespread. A significant new discovery is the
presence of PAHs in the halo of the galaxy. In the narrow bands that isolate
single PAH features, the emission shows structure similar to high latitude
features seen in other galaxies in other tracers. The features extend as far as
6.5 kpc from the plane but scale heights of 3.5 kpc are more typical. The
(lambda 11.3/lambda7.7) ratio also appears to increase with distance from the
major axis. To our knowledge, this is the first time PAHs have been seen in the
halo of an external galaxy. Just as significantly, they are seen in a low SFR
galaxy, suggesting that strong SNe and winds are not necessary for these large
molecules to reach high latitudes.Comment: A&A accept. 8 Sept. 05, 15 pages, 14 fig., pdf at
www.astro.queensu.ca/~irwin/pub/ngc590
Chandra Observation of the Edge-on Galaxy NGC 3556 (M 108): Violent Galactic Disk-halo Interaction Revealed
We present a 60 ks Chandra ACIS-S observation of the isolated edge-on spiral
NGC 3556, together with a multiwavelength analysis of various discrete X-ray
sources and diffuse X-ray features. Among 33 discrete X-ray sources detected
within the I_B = 25 mag per square arcsec isophote ellipse of the galaxy, we
identify a candidate for the galactic nucleus, an ultraluminous X-ray source
that might be an accreting intermediate-mass black hole, a possible X-ray
binary with a radio counterpart, and two radio-bright giant HII regions. We
detect large amounts of extraplanar diffuse X-ray emission, which extends about
10 kpc radially in the disk and >~ 4 kpc away from the galactic plane. The
diffuse X-ray emission exhibits significant substructures, possibly
representing various blown-out superbubbles or chimneys of hot gas heated in
massive star forming regions. This X-ray-emitting gas has temperatures in the
range of ~ 2-7 x 10^6 K and has a total cooling rate of ~ 2 x 10^40 erg/s. The
energy can be easily supplied by supernova blast-waves in the galaxy. These
results demonstrate NGC 3556 as being a galaxy undergoing vigorous disk-halo
interaction. The halo in NGC 3556 is considerably less extended, however, than
that of NGC 4631, in spite of many similarities between the two galaxies. This
may be due to the fact that NGC 3556 is isolated whereas NGC 4631 is
interacting. Thus NGC 3556 presents a more pristine environment for studying
the disk-halo interaction.Comment: 30 pages, 12 figures. To appear in ApJ. Please see
http://www.astro.umass.edu/~wqd/papers/n3556/n3556.pdf for a high resolution
versio
High Latitude HI in NGC 2613: Buoyant Disk-Halo Outflow
We combine new VLA D array HI data of NGC 2613 with previous high resolution
data to show new disk-halo features in this galaxy. The global HI distribution
is modeled in detail using a technique which can disentangle the effects of
inclination from scale height and can also solve for the average volume density
distribution in and perpendicular to the disk. The model shows that the
galaxy's inclination is on the low end of the range given by Chaves & Irwin
(2001) and that the HI disk is thin (z_e = 188 pc), showing no evidence for
halo. Numerous discrete disk-halo features are observed, however, achieving z
heights up to 28 kpc from mid-plane. One prominent feature in particular, of
mass, 8X10^7 Msun and height, 22 kpc, is seen on the advancing side of the
galaxy at a projected galactocentric radius of 15.5 kpc. If this feature
achieves such high latitudes because of events in the disk alone, then input
energies of order ~ 10^{56} ergs are required. We have instead investigated the
feasibility of such a large feature being produced via buoyancy (with drag)
within a hot, pre-existing X-ray corona. Reasonable plume densities,
temperatures, stall height (~ 11 kpc), outflow velocities and ages can indeed
be achieved in this way. The advantage of this scenario is that the input
energy need only be sufficient to produce blow-out, a condition which requires
a reduction of three orders of magnitude in energy. If this is correct, there
should be an observable X-ray halo around NGC 2613.Comment: 32 pages 7 gif figures, accepted by Ap
CHANG-ES V: Nuclear Radio Outflow in a Virgo Cluster Spiral after a Tidal Disruption Event
We have observed the Virgo Cluster spiral galaxy, NGC~4845, at 1.6 and 6 GHz
using the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array, as part of the `Continuum Halos in
Nearby Galaxies -- an EVLA Survey' (CHANG-ES). The source consists of a bright
unresolved core with a surrounding weak central disk (1.8 kpc diameter). The
core is variable over the 6 month time scale of the CHANG-ES data and has
increased by a factor of 6 since 1995. The wide bandwidths of
CHANG-ES have allowed us to determine the spectral evolution of this core which
peaks {\it between} 1.6 and 6 GHz (it is a GigaHertz-peaked spectrum source).We
show that the spectral turnover is dominated by synchrotron self-absorption and
that the spectral evolution can be explained by adiabatic expansion (outflow),
likely in the form of a jet or cone. The CHANG-ES observations serendipitously
overlap in time with the hard X-ray light curve obtained by Nikolajuk \& Walter
(2013) which they interpret as due to a tidal disruption event (TDE) of a
super-Jupiter mass object around a black hole. We outline a
standard jet model, provide an explanation for the observed circular
polarization, and quantitatively suggest a link between the peak radio and peak
X-ray emission via inverse Compton upscattering of the photons emitted by the
relativistic electrons. We predict that it should be possible to resolve a
young radio jet via VLBI as a result of this nearby TDE.Comment: 45 pages, 10 figures, accepted July 2, 2015 to the Astrophysical
Journa
- …