1,075 research outputs found
A GBT Survey for HI 21 cm Absorption in the Disks and Halos of Low-Redshift Galaxies
We present an HI 21 cm absorption survey with the Green Bank Telescope (GBT)
of galaxy-quasar pairs selected by combining data from the Sloan Digital Sky
Survey (SDSS) and the Faint Images of the Radio Sky at Twenty-Centimeters
(FIRST) survey. Our sample consists of 23 sightlines through 15 low-redshift
foreground galaxy - background quasar pairs with impact parameters ranging from
1.7 kpc up to 86.7 kpc. We detected one absorber in the GBT survey from the
foreground dwarf galaxy, GQ1042+0747, at an impact parameter of 1.7 kpc and
another possible absorber in our follow-up Very Large Array (VLA) imaging of
the nearby foreground galaxy, UGC 7408. Both of the absorbers are narrow (FWHM
of 3.6 and 4.8 km/s), have sub Damped Lyman alpha column densities, and most
likely originate in the disk gas of the foreground galaxies. We also detected H
I emission from three foreground galaxies, including UGC 7408. Although our
sample contains both blue and red galaxies, the two H I absorbers as well as
the H I emissions are associated with blue galaxies. We discuss the physical
conditions in the 21 cm absorbers and some drawbacks of the large GBT beam for
this type of survey.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures, 3 table
Evidence for Cold Accretion: Primitive Gas Flowing onto a Galaxy at z~0.274
We present UV and optical observations from the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph
on the Hubble Space Telescope and Keck of a z= 0.27395 Lyman limit system (LLS)
seen in absorption against the QSO PG1630+377. We detect H I absorption with
log N(HI)=17.06\pm0.05 as well as Mg II, C III, Si III, and O VI in this
system. The column densities are readily explained if this is a multi-phase
system, with the intermediate and low ions arising in a very low metallicity
([Mg/ H] =-1.71 \pm 0.06) photoionized gas. We identify via Keck spectroscopy
and Large Binocular Telescope imaging a 0.3 L_* star-forming galaxy projected
37 kpc from the QSO at nearly identical redshift (z=0.27406, \Delta v = -26
\kms) with near solar metallicity ([O/ H]=-0.20 \pm 0.15). The presence of very
low metallicity gas in the proximity of a near-solar metallicity, sub-L_*
galaxy strongly suggests that the LLS probes gas infalling onto the galaxy. A
search of the literature reveals that such low metallicity LLSs are not
uncommon. We found that 50% (4/8) of the well-studied z < 1 LLSs have
metallicities similar to the present system and show sub-L_* galaxies with rho
< 100 kpc in those fields where redshifts have been surveyed. We argue that the
properties of these primitive LLSs and their host galaxies are consistent with
those of cold mode accretion streams seen in galaxy simulations.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
The COS Absorption Survey of Baryon Harbors (CASBaH): Warm-hot Circumgalactic Gas Reservoirs Traced by Ne VIII Absorption
We survey the highly ionized circumgalactic media (CGM) of 29 blindly
selected galaxies at 0.49 < z_(gal) < 1.44 based on high-S/N ultraviolet
spectra of z > 1 QSOs and the galaxy database from the COS Absorption Survey of
Baryon Harbors (CASBaH). We detect the Ne VIII doublet in nine of the galaxies,
and for gas with N(Ne VIII) > 10^13.3 cm^-2 (> 10^13.5 cm^-2), we derive a Ne
VIII covering fraction f_c = 75 +15/-25% (44 +22/-20%) within impact parameter
(rho) < 200 kpc of M_* = 10^(9.5-11.5) Msol galaxies and f_c = 70 +16/-22% (f_c
= 42 +20/-17%) within rho < 1.5 virial radii. We estimate the mass in Ne
VIII-traced gas to be M_gas(Ne VIII) > 10^9.5 Msol (Z/Zsol)^-1, or 6-20% of the
expected baryonic mass if the Ne VIII absorbers have solar metallicity.
Ionizing Ne VII to Ne VIII requires 207 eV, and photons with this energy are
scarce in the CGM. However, for the median halo mass and redshift of our
sample, the virial temperature is close to the peak temperature for the Ne VIII
ion, and the Ne VIII-bearing gas is plausibly collisionally ionized near this
temperature. Moreover, we find that photoionized Ne VIII requires cool and
low-density clouds that would be highly underpressured (by approximately two
orders of magnitude) relative to the putative, ambient virialized medium,
complicating scenarios where such clouds could survive. Thus, more complex
(e.g., non-equilibrium) models may be required; this first statistical sample
of Ne VIII absorber/galaxy systems will provide stringent constraints for
future CGM studies.Comment: Published in ApJL, Volume 877, Issue 2, Article L2
The COS-Halos Survey: Keck LRIS and Magellan MagE Optical Spectroscopy
We present high signal-to-noise optical spectra for 67 low-redshift (0.1 < z
< 0.4) galaxies that lie within close projected distances (5 kpc < rho < 150
kpc) of 38 background UV-bright QSOs. The Keck LRIS and Magellan MagE data
presented here are part of a survey that aims to construct a statistically
sampled map of the physical state and metallicity of gaseous galaxy halos using
the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS) on the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). We
provide a detailed description of the optical data reduction and subsequent
spectral analysis that allow us to derive the physical properties of this
uniquely data-rich sample of galaxies. The galaxy sample is divided into 38
pre-selected L ~ L*, z ~ 0.2 "target" galaxies and 29 "bonus" galaxies that lie
in close proximity to the QSO sightlines. We report galaxy spectroscopic
redshifts accurate to +/- 30 km s-1, impact parameters, rest-frame colors,
stellar masses, total star formation rates, and gas-phase interstellar medium
oxygen abundances. When we compare the distribution of these galaxy
characteristics to those of the general low-redshift population, we find good
agreement. The L ~ L* galaxies in this sample span a diverse range of color
(1.0 < u-r < 3.0), stellar mass (10^9.5 < M/M_sun < 10^11.5), and SFRs (0.01 -
20 M_sun yr-1). These optical data, along with the COS UV spectroscopy,
comprise the backbone of our efforts to understand how halo gas properties may
correlate with their host galaxy properties, and ultimately to uncover the
processes that drive gas outflow and/or are influenced by gas inflow.Comment: 20 pages, 12 Figures, Submitted to ApJ
A Bayesian Nonparametric Approach to Modeling Motion Patterns
The most difficult—and often most essential—
aspect of many interception and tracking tasks is constructing
motion models of the targets to be found. Experts can
often provide only partial information, and fitting parameters
for complex motion patterns can require large amounts
of training data. Specifying how to parameterize complex
motion patterns is in itself a difficult task.
In contrast, nonparametric models are very flexible and
generalize well with relatively little training data. We propose
modeling target motion patterns as a mixture of Gaussian
processes (GP) with a Dirichlet process (DP) prior over
mixture weights. The GP provides a flexible representation
for each individual motion pattern, while the DP assigns observed
trajectories to particular motion patterns. Both automatically
adjust the complexity of the motion model based
on the available data. Our approach outperforms several parametric
models on a helicopter-based car-tracking task on
data collected from the greater Boston area
New abundance determinations in z < 1.5 QSO absorbers: seven sub-DLAs and one DLA
We present chemical abundance measurements from high resolution observations
of 7 sub-damped Lyman-alpha absorbers and 1 damped Lyman-alpha system at z<1.5.
Three of these objects have high metallicity, with near or super-solar Zn
abundance. Grids of Cloudy models for each system were constructed to look for
possible ionization effects in these systems. For the systems in which we could
constrain the ionization parameter, we find that the ionization corrections as
predicted by the Cloudy models are generally small and within the typical error
bars (~0.15 dex), in general agreement with previous studies. The Al III to Al
II ratio for these and other absorbers from the literature are compared, and we
find that while the sub-DLAs have a larger scatter in the Al III to Al II
ratios than the DLAs, there appears to be little correlation between the ratio
and N(H I). The relationship between the metallicity and the velocity width of
the profile for these systems is investigated. We show that the sub-DLAs that
have been observed to date follow a similar trend as DLA absorbers, with the
more metal rich systems exhibiting large velocity widths. We also find that the
systems at the upper edge of this relationship with high metallicities and
large velocity widths are more likely to be sub-DLAs than DLA absorbers,
perhaps implying that the sub-DLA absorbers are more representative of massive
galaxies.Comment: 15 pages, 15 Figures, Accepted by MNRAS, updated references and
author
A Fabry-Perot Imaging Search for Lyman-alpha Emission in Quasar Absorbers at z ~ 2.4
We have carried out a deep narrow-band imaging survey of six fields with
heavy-element quasar absorption lines, using the Goddard Fabry-Perot (FP)
system at the Apache Point Observatory (APO) 3.5-meter telescope. The aim of
these observations was to search for redshifted Ly- emission from the
galaxies underlying the absorbers at and their companion
galaxies. The 3 sensitivity levels ranged between
and erg s cm in
observed-frame Ly- flux. No significant Ly- emitters were
detected at level. The absence of significant Ly- emission
implies limits on the star formation rate (SFR) of 0.9-2.7
yr per 2-pixel x 2-pixel region, if no dust attenuation is assumed. We
compare our results with those from other emission-line studies of absorber
fields and with predictions for global average SFR based on the models of
cosmic chemical evolution. Our limits are among the tightest existing
constraints on Ly- emission from galaxies in absorber fields, but are
consistent with many other studies. In the absence of dust attenuation, these
studies suggest that SFRs in a large fraction of objects in the absorber fields
may lie below the global mean SFR. However, it is possible that dust
attenuation is responsible for the low emission line fluxes in some objects. It
is also possible that the star-forming regions are compact and at smaller
angular separations from the quasar than the width of our point spread function
and, get lost in the quasar emission. We outline future observations that could
help to distinguish between the various possibilities.Comment: Accepted for Publication in the Astrophysical Journal, 32 pages, 8
figures. NOTE: 25 of the 29 subpanels in the figures are included here at
lower resolution to keep the astroph submission size within allowed limits.
Please see http://boson.physics.sc.edu/~kulkarni/fpimaging.html for a pdf
file of the complete paper including all subpanels of all figures in the
original higher resolutio
Using 21cm Absorption in Small Impact Parameter Galaxy-QSO Pairs to Probe Low-Redshift Damped and Sub-Damped Lyman-alpha System
To search for low-redshift damped Lyman-alpha (DLA) and sub-DLA quasar
absorbers, we have conducted a 21cm absorption survey of radio-loud quasars at
small impact parameters to foreground galaxies selected from the Sloan Digital
Sky Survey (SDSS). Here we present the first results from this survey based on
observations of SDSS J104257.58+074850.5 ( = 2.66521), a quasar at an
angular separation from a foreground galaxy ( = 0.03321) of 2.5" (1.7
kpc in projection). The foreground galaxy is a low-luminosity spiral with
on-going star formation (0.004 M yr kpc) and a
metallicity of dex. We detect 21cm absorption from the galaxy
with the Green Bank Telescope (GBT), the Very Large Array (VLA), and the Very
Long Baseline Array (VLBA). The absorption appears to be quiescent disk gas
corotating with the galaxy and we do not find any evidence for outflowing cold
neutral gas. The width of the main absorption line indicates that the gas is
cold, K, and the HI column is surprisingly low given the impact
parameter of 1.7 kpc; we find that N(HI) cm
(GBT) and N(HI) cm (VLBA). VLBA marginally
resolves the continuum source and the absorber, and a lower limit of 27.1
13.9 pc is derived for the size of the absorbing cloud. In turn, this
indicates a low density for a cold cloud, n(HI) 3.5 cm. We
hypothesize that this galaxy, which is relatively isolated, is becoming
depleted in HI because it is converting its interstellar matter into stars
without a replenishing source of gas, and we suggest future observations to
probe this and similar galaxies.Comment: 16 Pages including 12 Figures and 2 Table
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