3,230 research outputs found
The sub-millimeter properties of broad absorption line quasars
We have carried out the first systematic survey of the sub-millimeter
properties of broad absorption line (BAL) quasars. 30 BAL quasars drawn from a
homogeneously selected sample from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey at redshifts
2<z<2.6 were observed with the SCUBA array at the JCMT to a typical rms
sensitivity of 2.5 mJy. Eight quasars were detected at > 2 sigma significance,
four of which are at > 3 sigma significance. The far-infrared luminosities of
these quasars are > 10^{13} L_solar. There is no correlation of sub-millimeter
flux with either the strength of the broad absorption feature or with absolute
magnitude in our sample. We compare the sub-millimeter flux distribution of the
BAL quasar sample with that of a sample of quasars which do not show BAL
features in their optical spectra and find that the two are indistinguishable.
BAL quasars do not have higher sub-millimeter luminosities than non-BAL
quasars. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that all quasars
would contain a BAL if viewed along a certain line-of-sight. The data are
inconsistent with a model in which the BAL phenomenon indicates a special
evolutionary stage which co-incides with a large dust mass in the host galaxy
and a high sub-millimeter luminosity. Our work provides constraints on
alternative evolutionary explanations of BAL quasars.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, ApJ, in pres
Desorption From Interstellar Ices
The desorption of molecular species from ice mantles back into the gas phase
in molecular clouds results from a variety of very poorly understood processes.
We have investigated three mechanisms; desorption resulting from H_2 formation
on grains, direct cosmic ray heating and cosmic ray induced photodesorption.
Whilst qualitative differences exist between these processes (essentially
deriving from the assumptions concerning the species-selectivity of the
desorption and the assumed threshold adsorption energies, E_t) all three
processes are found to be potentially very significant in dark cloud
conditions. It is therefore important that all three mechanisms should be
considered in studies of molecular clouds in which freeze-out and desorption
are believed to be important.
Employing a chemical model of a typical static molecular core and using
likely estimates for the quantum yields of the three processes we find that
desorption by H_2 formation probably dominates over the other two mechanisms.
However, the physics of the desorption processes and the nature of the dust
grains and ice mantles are very poorly constrained. We therefore conclude that
the best approach is to set empirical constraints on the desorption, based on
observed molecular depletions - rather than try to establish the desorption
efficiencies from purely theoretical considerations. Applying this method to
one such object (L1689B) yields upper limits to the desorption efficiencies
that are consistent with our understanding of these mechanisms.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, accepted by MNRAS subject to minor revision
which has been carried ou
Glass Transition Phenomena Semiannual Status Report
Multiple glass transitions, heat capacities, and equation of state properties of polymer system
Low-power radio galaxy environments in the Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep Field at z~0.5
We present multi-object spectroscopy of galaxies in the immediate (Mpc-scale)
environments of four low-power (L_1.4 GHz < 10^25 W/Hz) radio galaxies at
z~0.5, selected from the Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep Field. We use the spectra to
calculate velocity dispersions and central redshifts of the groups the radio
galaxies inhabit, and combined with XMM-Newton (0.3-10 keV) X-ray observations
investigate the L_X--sigma_v and T_X--sigma_v scaling relationships. All the
radio galaxies reside in moderately rich groups -- intermediate environments
between poor groups and rich clusters, with remarkably similar X-ray
properties. We concentrate our discussion on our best statistical example that
we interpret as a low-power (FRI) source triggered within a sub-group, which in
turn is interacting with a nearby group of galaxies, containing the bulk of the
X-ray emission for the system -- a basic scenario which can be compared to more
powerful radio sources at both high (z>4) and low (z<0.1) redshifts. This
suggests that galaxy-galaxy interactions triggered by group mergers may play an
important role in the life-cycle of radio galaxies at all epochs and
luminosities.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS. High
resolution version available upon reques
The Linear-Size Evolution of Classical Double Radio Sources
Recent investigations of how the median size of extragalactic radio sources
change with redshift have produced inconsistent results. Eales compared the
radio and optical properties of a bright 3C and faint 6C sample and concluded
that (), with being the median
size of the radio sources at a given epoch and z the redshift. Oort, Katgert,
and Windhorst, on the other hand, from a comparison of the properties of a
number of radio samples, found much stronger evolution, with
. In this paper we attempt to resolve the
difference. We have repeated the analysis of Eales using the virtually complete
redshift information that now exists for the 6C sample. Confining our analysis
to FR2 sources, which we argue is the best-understood class of radio sources
and the least likely to be affected by selection effects, we find
() and
(). Our complete redshift information allows us to gain insight
into our result by plotting a radio luminosity-size (P-D) diagram for the 6C
sample. The most obvious difference between the 3C and 6C P-D diagrams is the
clump of sources in the 6C diagram at . These clump sources have similar sizes to the emission-line
regions found around high-redshift radio galaxies, suggesting that the presence
of dense line-emitting gas around high-redshift radio galaxies is responsible
for the size evolution. We show that this explanation can quantitatively
explain the observed size evolution, as long as there is either little X-ray
emitting gas around these objects or, if there is, it is distributed in a
similar way to the emission-line gas: highly anisotropic and inhomogeneous.Comment: compressed and uuencoded postscript file. 33 pages including 5
figures (441951 bytes). Accepted for publication in September Ap
Cosmology with redshift surveys of radio sources
We use the K-z relation for radio galaxies to illustrate why it has proved
difficult to obtain definitive cosmological results from studies based entirely
on catalogues of the brightest radio sources, e.g. 3C. To improve on this
situation we have been undertaking redshift surveys of complete samples drawn
from the fainter 6C and 7C radio catalogues. We describe these surveys, and
illustrate the new studies they are allowing. We also discuss our `filtered' 6C
redshift surveys: these have led to the discovery of a radio galaxy at z=4.4,
and are sensitive to similar objects at higher redshift provided the space
density of these objects is not declining too rapidly with z. There is
currently no direct evidence for a sharp decline in the space density of radio
galaxies for z > 4, a result only barely consistent with the observed decline
of flat-spectrum radio quasars.Comment: 8 pages Latex, To appear in the "Cosmology with the New Radio
Surveys" Conference - Tenerife 13-15 January 199
Molecules, ices and astronomy
Molecules in interstellar gas and in interstellar ices play a fundamental role in astronomy. However, the formation of the simplest molecule, molecular hydrogen, is still not fully understood. Similarly, although interstellar ice analogues have received much attention in the laboratory, the evolution of ices in the interstellar medium still requires further study. At UCL we have developed two separate experiments to address these issues and explore the following questions: How is H formed on dust-grain surfaces? What is the budget between internal, kinetic and surface energies in the formation process? What are the astronomical consequences of these results? For ices, we ask: How do molecules desorb from pure and from mixed ices in regions warmed by newly formed stars? What can molecules released from ices tell us about the star-formation process? We put our results in the context of other laboratory work and we describe their application to current problems in astronomy
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