160 research outputs found
Catalog of Isolated Galaxies Selected from the 2MASS Survey
We search for isolated galaxies based on the automatic identification of
isolated sources from the Two Micron All-Sky Survey (2MASS) followed by a
visual inspection of their surroundings. We use the modified Karachentseva
criterion to compile a catalog of 3227 isolated galaxies (2MIG), which contains
6% of 2MASS Extended Sources Catalog (or 2MASX) sources brighter than Ks = 12
mag with angular diameters a_K > 30 arcsec. The catalog covers the entire sky
and has an effective depth of z = 0.02. The 2493 very isolated objects of the
catalog, which we include into the 2MVIG catalog, can be used as a reference
sample to investigate the effects of the environment on the structure and
evolution of galaxies located in regions with extremely low density of matter.Comment: 19 pages, 13 figure
Catalog of Nearby Isolated Galaxies in the Volume z<0.01
We present a catalog of 520 most isolated nearby galaxies with radial
velocities V_LG<3500 km/s covering the entire sky. This population of "space
orphans" makes up 4.8% among 10900 galaxies with measured radial velocities. We
describe the isolation criterion used to select our sample, called the "Local
Orphan Galaxies" (LOG), and discuss their basic optical and HI properties. A
half of the LOG catalog is occupied by the Sdm, Im and Ir morphological type
galaxies without a bulge. The median ratio M_gas/M_star in the LOG galaxies
exceeds 1. The distribution of the catalog galaxies on the sky looks uniform
with some signatures of a weak clustering on the scale of about 0.5 Mpc. The
LOG galaxies are located in the regions where the mean local density of matter
is approximately 50 times lower than the mean global density. We indicate a
number of LOG galaxies with distorted structures, which may be the consequence
of interaction of isolated galaxies with massive dark objects
Detection of an intergalactic meteor particle with the 6-m telescope
On July 28, 2006 the 6-m telescope of the Special Astrophysical Observatory
of the Russian Academy of Sciences recorded the spectrum of a faint meteor. We
confidently identify the lines of FeI and MgI, OI, NI and molecular-nitrogen
N_2 bands. The entry velocity of the meteor body into the Earth's atmosphere
estimated from radial velocity is equal to 300 km/s. The body was several tens
of a millimeter in size, like chondrules in carbon chondrites. The radiant of
the meteor trajectory coincides with the sky position of the apex of the motion
of the Solar system toward the centroid of the Local Group of galaxies.
Observations of faint sporadic meteors with FAVOR TV CCD camera confirmed the
radiant at a higher than 96% confidence level. We conclude that this meteor
particle is likely to be of extragalactic origin. The following important
questions remain open: (1) How metal-rich dust particles came to be in the
extragalactic space? (2) Why are the sizes of extragalactic particles larger by
two orders of magnitude (and their masses greater by six orders of magnitude)
than common interstellar dust grains in our Galaxy? (3) If extragalactic dust
surrounds galaxies in the form of dust (or gas-and-dust) aureoles, can such
formations now be observed using other observational techniques (IR
observations aboard Spitzer satellite, etc.)? (4) If inhomogeneous
extragalactic dust medium with the parameters mentioned above actually exists,
does it show up in the form of irregularities on the cosmic microwave
background (WMAP etc.)?Comment: 9 pages, 6 EPS figure
New Probable Dwarf Galaxies in Northern Groups of the Local Supercluster
We have searched for nearby dwarf galaxies in 27 northern groups with
characteristic distances 8-15 Mpc based on the Second Palomar Sky Survey
prints. In a total area of about 2000 square degrees, we have found 90
low-surface-brightness objects, more than 60% of which are absent from known
catalogs and lists. We have classified most of these objects (~80%) as
irregular dwarf systems. The first 21-cm line observations of the new objects
with the 100-m Effelsberg radio telescope showed that the typical linear
diameters (1-2 kpc), internal motions (30 km/s), and hydrogen masses
(~2*10^7M_sun) galaxies correspond to those expected for the dwarf population
of nearby groups.Comment: 8 pages, 1 fugur
The Bulk Motion of Flat Edge-On Galaxies Based on 2MASS Photometry
We report the results of applying the 2MASS Tully-Fisher (TF) relations to
study the galaxy bulk flows. For 1141 all-sky distributed flat RFGC galaxies we
construct J, H, K_s TF relations and find that Kron magnitudes show
the smallest dispersion on the TF diagram. For the sample of 971 RFGC galaxies
with V_{3K} < 18000 km/s we find a dispersion and an
amplitude of bulk flow V= 199 +/-61 km/s, directed towards l=301 degr +/-18
degr, b=-2 degr +/-15 degr. Our determination of low-amplitude coherent flow is
in good agreement with a set of recent data derived from EFAR, PSCz, SCI/SCII
samples. The resultant two- dimensional smoothed peculiar velocity field traces
well the large-scale density variations in the galaxy distributions. The
regions of large positive peculiar velocities lie in the direction of the Great
Attractor and Shapley concentration. A significant negative peculiar velocity
is seen in the direction of Bootes and in the direction of the Local void. A
small positive peculiar velocity (100 -- 150 km/s) is seen towards the
Pisces-Perseus supercluster, as well as the Hercules - Coma - Corona Borealis
supercluster regions.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures. A&A/2003/3582 accepted 15.05.200
Infrared luminosities of galaxies in the Local Volume
Near-infrared properties of 451 galaxies with distances D \leq 10 Mpc are
considered basing on the all-sky two micron survey (2MASS). A luminosity
function of the galaxies in the K-band is derived within [-25,-11] mag. The
local (D < 8 Mpc) luminosity density is estimated to be 6.8*10^8 L_sun/Mpc^3
that exceeds (1.5+-0.1) times the global cosmic density in the K-band. Virial
mass-to-K-luminosity ratios are determined for nearby groups and clusters. In
the luminosity range of (5*10^{10} - 2*10^{13})L_sun, the groups and clusters
follow the relation \lg(M/L_K) propto (0.27+-0.03) lg(L_K) with a scatter of
\~0.1 comparable to errors of the observables. The mean ratio ~=
(20-25) M_sun/L_sun for the galaxy systems turns out to be significantly lower
than the global ratio, (80-90)M_sun/L_sun, expected in the standard
cosmological model with the matter density of Omega_m =0.27. This discrepancy
can be resolved if most of dark matter in the universe is not associated with
galaxies and their systems.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures. Astronomy Letters, submitte
Binary Galaxies in the Local Supercluster and Its Neighborhood
We report a catalog of 509 pairs identified among 10403 nearby galaxies with
line-of-sight velocities V_LG < 3500 km/s.We selected binary systems in
accordance with two criteria (bounding and temporal), which require the
physical pair of galaxies to have negative total energy and its components to
be located inside the zero-velocity surface. We assume that individual galaxy
masses are proportional to their total K-band luminosities, M = L_K x 6M/L. The
catalog gives the magnitudes and morphological types of galaxies and also the
projected (orbital) masses and pair isolation indices. The component
line-of-sight velocity differences and projected distances of the binary
systems considered have power-law distributions with the median values of 35
km/s and 123 kpc, respectively. The median mass-to-K-band luminosity ratio is
equal to 11 M/L, and its uncertainty is mostly due to the errors of measured
velocities. Our sample of binary systems has a typical density contrast of d
ro/ro_c ~ 500 and a median crossing time of about 3.5 Gyr. We point out the
substantial fraction of binary systems consisting of late-type dwarf galaxies,
where the luminosities of both components are lower than that of the Small
Magellanic Cloud. The median projected distance for 41 such pairs is only 30
kpc, and the median difference of their line-of-sight velocities is equal to 14
km/s which is smaller than the typical error for radial-velocity (30 km/s).
This specific population of gas-rich dwarf binary galaxies such as I Zw 18 may
be at the stage immediately before merging of its components. Such objects,
which are usually lost in flux-limited (and not distance-limited) samples
deserve a thorough study in the HI radio line with high spatial and velocity
resolution.Comment: published in Astrophysical Bulletin, 2008, Vol. 63, No. 4, pp.
299-34
Missing Dark Matter in the Local Universe
A sample of 11 thousand galaxies with radial velocities V_ LG < 3500 km/s is
used to study the features of the local distribution of luminous (stellar) and
dark matter within a sphere of radius of around 50 Mpc around us. The average
density of matter in this volume, Omega_m,loc=0.08+-0.02, turns out to be much
lower than the global cosmic density Omega_m,glob=0.28+-0.03. We discuss three
possible explanations of this paradox: 1) galaxy groups and clusters are
surrounded by extended dark halos, the major part of the mass of which is
located outside their virial radii; 2) the considered local volume of the
Universe is not representative, being situated inside a giant void; and 3) the
bulk of matter in the Universe is not related to clusters and groups, but is
rather distributed between them in the form of massive dark clumps. Some
arguments in favor of the latter assumption are presented. Besides the two
well-known inconsistencies of modern cosmological models with the observational
data: the problem of missing satellites of normal galaxies and the problem of
missing baryons, there arises another one - the issue of missing dark matter.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figures, 1 table (accepted
Local dark energy: HST evidence from the vicinity of the M 81/M 82 galaxy group
The Hubble Space Telescope observations of the nearby galaxy group M 81/M 82
and its vicinity indicate that the expansion outflow around the group is
dominated by the antigravity of the dark energy background. The local density
of dark energy in the area is estimated to be near the global dark energy
density or perhaps exactly equal to it. This conclusion agrees with our
previous results for the Local group vicinity and the vicinity of the Cen A/M
83 group.Comment: 17 pages, 1 figur
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