695 research outputs found
Chandra HETGS Multiphase Spectroscopy Of The Young Magnetic O Star Theta(1) Orionis C
We report on four Chandra grating observations of the oblique magnetic rotator theta(1) Ori C (O5.5 V), covering a wide range of viewing angles with respect to the star\u27s 1060 G dipole magnetic field. We employ line-width and centroid analyses to study the dynamics of the X-ray - emitting plasma in the circumstellar environment, as well as line-ratio diagnostics to constrain the spatial location, and global spectral modeling to constrain the temperature distribution and abundances of the very hot plasma. We investigate these diagnostics as a function of viewing angle and analyze them in conjunction with new MHD simulations of the magnetically channeled wind shock mechanism on theta(1) Ori C. This model fits all the data surprisingly well, predicting the temperature, luminosity, and occultation of the X-ray - emitting plasma with rotation phase
Environmental Effects on the Metal Enrichment of Low Mass Galaxies in Nearby Clusters
In this paper we study the chemical history of low-mass star-forming (SF)
galaxies in the local Universe clusters Coma, A1367, A779, and A634. The aim of
this work is to search for the imprint of the environment on the chemical
evolution of these galaxies. Galaxy chemical evolution is linked to the star
formation history (SFH), as well as to the gas interchange with the
environment, and low-mass galaxies are well known to be vulnerable systems to
environmental processes affecting both these parameters. For our study we have
used spectra from the SDSS-III DR8. We have examined the mass-metallicity
relation of cluster galaxies finding well defined sequences. The slope of these
sequences, for galaxies in low-mass clusters and galaxies at large
cluster-centric distances, follows the predictions of recent hydrodynamic
models. A flattening of this slope has been observed for galaxies located in
the core of the two more massive clusters of the sample, principally in Coma,
suggesting that the imprint of the cluster environment on the chemical
evolution of SF galaxies should be sensitive to both the galaxy mass and the
host cluster mass. The HI gas content of Coma and A1367 galaxies indicate that
low-mass SF galaxies, located at the core of these clusters, have been severely
affected by ram-pressure stripping. The observed mass-dependent enhancement of
the metal content of low-mass galaxies in dense environments seems plausible,
according to hydrodynamic simulations. This enhanced metal enrichment could be
produced by the combination of effects such as wind reaccretion, due to
pressure cofinement by the intra-cluster medium (ICM), and the truncation of
gas infall, as a result of the ram-pressure stripping. Thus, the properties of
the ICM should play an important role in the chemical evolution of low-mass
galaxies in clusters.Comment: ApJ accepted, 31 pages, 13 figure
Ram pressure stripping of tilted galaxies
Ram pressure stripping of galaxies in clusters can yield gas deficient disks.
Previous numerical simulations based on various approaches suggested that,
except for near edge-on disk orientations, the amount of stripping depends very
little on the inclination angle. Following our previous study of face-on
stripping, we extend the set of parameters with the disk tilt angle and explore
in detail the effects of the ram pressure on the interstellar content (ISM) of
tilted galaxies that orbit in various environments of clusters, with compact or
extended distributions of the intra-cluster medium (ICM). We further study how
results of numerical simulations could be estimated analytically. A grid of
numerical simulations with varying parameters is produced using the tree/SPH
code GADGET with a modified method for calculating the ISM-ICM interaction.
These SPH calculations extend the set of existing results obtained from
different codes using various numerical techniques. The simulations confirm the
general trend of less stripping at orientations close to edge-on. The
dependence on the disk tilt angle is more pronounced for compact ICM
distributions, however it almost vanishes for strong ram pressure pulses.
Although various hydrodynamical effects are present in the ISM-ICM interaction,
the main quantitative stripping results appear to be roughly consistent with a
simple scenario of momentum transfer from the encountered ICM. This behavior
can also be found in previous simulations. To reproduce the numerical results
we propose a fitting formula depending on the disk tilt angle and on the column
density of the encountered ICM. Such a dependence is superior to that on the
peak ram pressure used in previous simple estimates
Caught in the Act: Strong, Active Ram Pressure Stripping in Virgo Cluster Spiral NGC 4330
We present a multi-wavelength study of NGC 4330, a highly-inclined spiral
galaxy in the Virgo Cluster which is a clear example of strong, ongoing ICM-ISM
ram pressure stripping. The HI has been removed from well within the
undisturbed old stellar disk, to 50% - 65% of R_25. Multi-wavelength data (WIYN
BVR and H-alpha, VLA 21-cm HI and radio continuum, and GALEX NUV and FUV)
reveal several one-sided extraplanar features likely caused by ram pressure at
an intermediate disk-wind angle. At the leading edge of the interaction, the
H-alpha and dust extinction curve sharply out of the disk in a remarkable and
distinctive "upturn" feature that may be generally useful as a diagnostic
indicator of active ram pressure. On the trailing side, the ISM is stretched
out in a long tail which contains 10% of the galaxy's total HI emission, 6 - 9%
of its NUV-FUV emission, but only 2% of the H-alpha. The centroid of the HI
tail is downwind of the UV/H-alpha tail, suggesting that the ICM wind has
shifted most of the ISM downwind over the course of the past 10 - 300 Myr.
Along the major axis, the disk is highly asymmetric in the UV, but more
symmetric in H-alpha and HI, also implying recent changes in the distributions
of gas and star formation. The UV-optical colors indicate very different star
formation histories for the leading and trailing sides of the galaxy. On the
leading side, a strong gradient in the UV-optical colors of the gas-stripped
disk suggests that it has taken 200-400 Myr to strip the gas from a radius of
>8 to 5 kpc, but on the trailing side there is no age gradient. All our data
suggest a scenario in which NGC 4330 is falling into cluster center for first
time and has experienced a significant increase in ram pressure over the last
200-400 Myr.Comment: AJ accepted; 22 pages, 25 figures, version with full-resolution
figures available at http://www.astro.yale.edu/abramso
Chandra HETGS Multi-Phase Spectroscopy of the Young Magnetic O Star theta^1 Orionis C
We report on four Chandra grating observations of the oblique magnetic
rotator theta^1 Ori C (O5.5 V) covering a wide range of viewing angles with
respect to the star's 1060 G dipole magnetic field. We employ line-width and
centroid analyses to study the dynamics of the X-ray emitting plasma in the
circumstellar environment, as well as line-ratio diagnostics to constrain the
spatial location, and global spectral modeling to constrain the temperature
distribution and abundances of the very hot plasma. We investigate these
diagnostics as a function of viewing angle and analyze them in conjunction with
new MHD simulations of the magnetically channeled wind shock mechanism on
theta^1 Ori C. This model fits all the data surprisingly well, predicting the
temperature, luminosity, and occultation of the X-ray emitting plasma with
rotation phase.Comment: 52 pages, 14 figures (1 color), 6 tables. To appear in the
Astrophysical Journal, 1 August 2005, v628, issue 2. New version corrects
e-mail address, figure and table formatting problem
X-Ray Emission Line Profile Modeling Of Hot Stars
The launch of high-spectral-resolution x-ray telescopes (Chandra, XMM) has provided a host of new spectralline diagnostics for the astrophysics community. In this paper we discuss Doppler-broadened emission line profiles from highly supersonic outflows of massive stars. These outflows, or winds, are driven by radiation pressure and carry a tremendous amount of kinetic energy, which can be converted to x rays by shock-heating even a small fraction of the wind plasma. The unshocked, cold wind is a source of continuum opacity to the x rays generated in the shock-heated portion of the wind. Thus the emergent line profiles are affected by transport through a two-component, moving, optically thick medium. While complicated, the interactions among these physical effects can provide quantitative information about the spatial distribution and velocity of the x-ray-emitting and absorbing plasma in stellar winds. We present quantitative models of both a spherically symmetric wind and a wind with hot plasma confined in an equatorial disk by a dipole magnetic field
The Large Magellanic Cloud: A power spectral analysis of Spitzer images
We present a power spectral analysis of Spitzer images of the Large
Magellanic Cloud. The power spectra of the FIR emission show two different
power laws. At larger scales (kpc) the slope is ~ -1.6, while at smaller ones
(tens to few hundreds of parsecs) the slope is steeper, with a value ~ -2.9.
The break occurs at a scale around 100-200 pc. We interpret this break as the
scale height of the dust disk of the LMC. We perform high resolution
simulations with and without stellar feedback. Our AMR hydrodynamic simulations
of model galaxies using the LMC mass and rotation curve, confirm that they have
similar two-component power-laws for projected density and that the break does
indeed occur at the disk thickness. Power spectral analysis of velocities
betrays a single power law for in-plane components. The vertical component of
the velocity shows a flat behavior for large structures and a power law similar
to the in-plane velocities at small scales. The motions are highly anisotropic
at large scales, with in-plane velocities being much more important than
vertical ones. In contrast, at small scales, the motions become more isotropic.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, talk presented at "Galaxies and their Masks",
celebrating Ken Freeman's 70-th birthday, Sossusvlei, Namibia, April 2010. To
be published by Springer, New York, editors D.L. Block, K.C. Freeman, & I.
Puerar
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