413 research outputs found
The Discovery of a Giant H-alpha Filament in NGC 7213
The nearby Seyfert galaxy NGC 7213 has been imaged in H-alpha and HI with the
CTIO 1.5 m telescope and with the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA),
respectively. Optically NGC 7213 looks undisturbed and relatively featureless
but the continuum-subtracted H-alpha image shows a 19 kpc long filament located
approximately 18.6 kpc from the nucleus. The H-alpha filament could be neutral
gas photo-ionized by the active nucleus, as has been suggested for the Seyfert
galaxy NGC 5252, or shock-ionized by a jet interacting with the surrounding HI,
as has been suggested for the radio galaxy PKS 2240-41. The HI map reveals NGC
7213 to be a highly disturbed system suggesting a past merging event.Comment: 14 pages including 4 figures and 1 table. Figures 1-4 are in jpeg
format; Better quality images can be retrieved in postscript format at
ftp://charon.nmsu.edu/pub/shameed/ ; Accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Synthetic analogues of the parasitic worm product ES-62 reduce disease development in in vivo models of lung fibrosis
Parasitic worms are receiving much attention as a potential new therapeutic approach to treating autoimmune and allergic conditions but concerns remain regarding their safety. As an alternative strategy, we have focused on the use of defined parasitic worm products and recently taken this one step further by designing drug-like small molecule analogues of one such product, ES-62, which is anti-inflammatory by virtue of covalently attached phosphorylcholine moieties. Previously, we have shown that ES-62 mimics are efficacious in protecting against disease in mouse models of rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus and skin and lung allergy. Given the potential role of chronic inflammation in fibrosis, in the present study we have focused our attention on lung fibrosis, a debilitating condition for which there is no cure and which in spite of treatment slowly gets worse over time. Two mouse models of fibrosis - bleomycin-induced and LPS-induced - in which roles for inflammation have been implicated were adopted. Four ES-62 analogues were tested - 11a and 12b, previously shown to be active in mouse models of allergic and autoimmune disease and 16b and AIK-29/62 both of which are structurally related to 11a. All four compounds were found to significantly reduce disease development in both fibrosis models, as shown by histopathological analysis of lung tissue, indicating their potential as treatments for this condition
Diffuse Gas and LMXBs in the Chandra Observation of the S0 Galaxy NGC 1553
We have spatially and spectrally resolved the sources of X-ray emission from
the X-ray faint S0 galaxy NGC 1553 using an observation from the Chandra X-ray
Observatory. The majority (70%) of the emission in the 0.3 - 10.0 keV band is
diffuse, and the remaining 30% is resolved into 49 discrete sources. Most of
the discrete sources associated with the galaxy appear to be low mass X-ray
binaries (LMXBs). The luminosity function of the LMXB sources is well-fit by a
broken power-law with a break luminosity comparable to the Eddington luminosity
for a 1.4 solar mass neutron star. It is likely that those sources with
luminosities above the break are accreting black holes and those below are
mostly neutron stars in binary systems. Spectra were extracted for the total
emission, diffuse emission, and sum of the resolved sources; the spectral fits
for all require a model including both a soft and hard component. The diffuse
emission is predominately soft while the emission from the sources is mostly
hard. Approximately 24% of the diffuse emission arises from unresolved LMXBs,
with the remainder resulting from thermal emission from hot gas. There is a
very bright source at the projected position of the nucleus of the galaxy. The
spectrum and luminosity derived from this central source are consistent with it
being an AGN; the galaxy also is a weak radio source. Finally, the diffuse
emission exhibits significant substructure with an intriguing spiral feature
passing through the center of the galaxy. The X-ray spectrum and surface
brightness of the spiral feature are consistent with adiabatic or shock
compression of ambient gas, but not with cooling. This feature may be due to
compression of the hot interstellar gas by radio lobes or jets associated with
the AGN.Comment: 23 pages using emulateapj.sty; ApJ, in press; revised version
includes correction to error in the L_X,src/L_B ratio as well as other
revision
Large-Scale CO Maps of the Lupus Molecular Cloud Complex
Fully sampled degree-scale maps of the 13CO 2-1 and CO 4-3 transitions toward
three members of the Lupus Molecular Cloud Complex - Lupus I, III, and IV -
trace the column density and temperature of the molecular gas. Comparison with
IR extinction maps from the c2d project requires most of the gas to have a
temperature of 8-10 K. Estimates of the cloud mass from 13CO emission are
roughly consistent with most previous estimates, while the line widths are
higher, around 2 km/s. CO 4-3 emission is found throughout Lupus I, indicating
widespread dense gas, and toward Lupus III and IV. Enhanced line widths at the
NW end and along the edge of the B228 ridge in Lupus I, and a coherent velocity
gradient across the ridge, are consistent with interaction between the
molecular cloud and an expanding HI shell from the Upper-Scorpius subgroup of
the Sco-Cen OB Association. Lupus III is dominated by the effects of two HAe/Be
stars, and shows no sign of external influence. Slightly warmer gas around the
core of Lupus IV and a low line width suggest heating by the
Upper-Centaurus-Lupus subgroup of Sco-Cen, without the effects of an HI shell.Comment: 54 pages, 27 figures, 5 tables. To appear in ApJS. Preprint also
available (with full-size figures) from
http://www.astro.ex.ac.uk/people/nfht/publications.html Datacubes available
from http://www.astro.ex.ac.uk/people/nfht/resources.htm
Radio Continuum Jet in NGC 7479
The barred galaxy NGC 7479 hosts a remarkable jet-like radio continuum
feature: bright, 12-kpc long in projection, and hosting an aligned magnetic
field. The degree of polarization is 6%-8% along the jet, and remarkably
constant, which is consistent with helical field models. The radio brightness
of the jet suggests strong interaction with the ISM and hence a location near
the disk plane. We observed NGC 7479 at four wavelengths with the VLA and
Effelsberg radio telescopes. The equipartition strength is 35-40 micro-G for
the total and >10 micro-G for the ordered magnetic field in the jet. The jet
acts as a bright, polarized background. Faraday rotation between 3.5 and 6 cm
and depolarization between 6 and 22 cm can be explained by magneto-ionic gas in
front of the jet, with thermal electron densities of ~0.06 cm**(-3) in the bar
and ~0.03 cm**(-3) outside the bar. The regular magnetic field along the bar
points toward the nucleus on both sides. The regular field in the disk reveals
multiple reversals, probably consisting of field loops stretched by a shearing
gas flow in the bar. The projection of the jet bending in the sky plane is in
the sense opposite to that of the underlying stellar and gaseous spiral
structure. The bending in 3-D is most easily explained as a precessing jet,
with an age less than 10**6 years. Our observations are consistent with very
recent triggering, possibly by a minor merger. NGC 7479 provides a unique
opportunity to study interaction-triggered 15-kpc scale radio jets within a
spiral galaxy.Comment: 18 pages, 21 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
Hard X-ray Luminosities of Multinuclei Infrared Luminous Galaxies Showing a Radio/Far-Infrared Excess
We report the results of hard X-ray observations of four multinuclei merging
infrared luminous galaxies (IRLGs). We selected these four sources for their
excess of radio to far-infrared luminosity ratio compared with starburst
galaxies. This excess suggests that activity associated with a supermassive
black hole (SMBH) contributes strongly to the IRLGs' bolometric luminosities.
Although we expect strong hard X-ray emission from the SMBH-driven activity,
the radio-excess multinuclei merging IRLGs show considerably smaller hard X-ray
luminosities relative to far-infrared (40500 m) and infrared (81000
m) luminosities than active galactic nuclei (AGNs) showing a similar
radio-excess. This result may demonstrate that emission in the hard X-ray
region from SMBH-driven activity in the multinuclei merging IRLGs is severely
suppressed compared to a typical spectral energy distribution of SMBH-driven
activity in AGNs. If this is a common property of merging IRLGs, without its
correction, hard X-ray observations underestimate the contribution of
SMBH-driven activity to the bolometric luminosities of merging IRLGs.Comment: 25 pages of text, 4 figures, aaspp4.sty, Astrophysical Journal, in
press (1999, Volume 527
The Futures of Bianchi type VII0 cosmologies with vorticity
We use expansion-normalised variables to investigate the Bianchi type VII
model with a tilted -law perfect fluid. We emphasize the late-time
asymptotic dynamical behaviour of the models and determine their asymptotic
states. Unlike the other Bianchi models of solvable type, the type VII
state space is unbounded. Consequently we show that, for a general
non-inflationary perfect fluid, one of the curvature variables diverges at late
times, which implies that the type VII model is not asymptotically
self-similar to the future. Regarding the tilt velocity, we show that for
fluids with (which includes the important case of dust,
) the tilt velocity tends to zero at late times, while for a
radiation fluid, , the fluid is tilted and its vorticity is
dynamically significant at late times. For fluids stiffer than radiation
(), the future asymptotic state is an extremely tilted spacetime
with vorticity.Comment: 23 pages, v2:references and comments added, typos fixed, to appear in
CQ
Linearized gravity and gauge conditions
In this paper we consider the field equations for linearized gravity and
other integer spin fields on the Kerr spacetime, and more generally on
spacetimes of Petrov type D. We give a derivation, using the GHP formalism, of
decoupled field equations for the linearized Weyl scalars for all spin weights
and identify the gauge source functions occuring in these. For the spin weight
0 Weyl scalar, imposing a generalized harmonic coordinate gauge yields a
generalization of the Regge-Wheeler equation. Specializing to the Schwarzschild
case, we derive the gauge invariant Regge-Wheeler and Zerilli equation directly
from the equation for the spin 0 scalar.Comment: 24 pages, corresponds to published versio
The late-time behaviour of vortic Bianchi type VIII Universes
We use the dynamical systems approach to investigate the Bianchi type VIII
models with a tilted -law perfect fluid. We introduce
expansion-normalised variables and investigate the late-time asymptotic
behaviour of the models and determine the late-time asymptotic states. For the
Bianchi type VIII models the state space is unbounded and consequently, for all
non-inflationary perfect fluids, one of the curvature variables grows without
bound. Moreover, we show that for fluids stiffer than dust (), the
fluid will in general tend towards a state of extreme tilt. For dust
(), or for fluids less stiff than dust (), we show that
the fluid will in the future be asymptotically non-tilted. Furthermore, we show
that for all the universe evolves towards a vacuum state but
does so rather slowly, .Comment: 19 pages, 3 ps figures, v2:typos fixed, refs and more discussion
adde
Wave propagation in linear electrodynamics
The Fresnel equation governing the propagation of electromagnetic waves for
the most general linear constitutive law is derived. The wave normals are found
to lie, in general, on a fourth order surface. When the constitutive
coefficients satisfy the so-called reciprocity or closure relation, one can
define a duality operator on the space of the two-forms. We prove that the
closure relation is a sufficient condition for the reduction of the fourth
order surface to the familiar second order light cone structure. We finally
study whether this condition is also necessary.Comment: 13 pages. Phys. Rev. D, to appea
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