50 research outputs found

    Graduate Program in Astrophysics in Split

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    Beginning in autumn 2008 the first generation of astronomy master students will start a 2 year course in Astrophysics offered by the Physics department of the University of Split, Croatia (http://fizika.pmfst.hr/astro/english/index.html). This unique master course in South-Eastern Europe, following the Bologna convention and given by astronomers from international institutions, offers a series of comprehensive lectures designed to greatly enhance students' knowledge and skills in astrophysics, and prepare them for a scientific career. An equally important aim of the course is to recognise the areas in which astronomy and astrophysics can serve as a national asset and to use them to prepare young people for real life challenges, enabling graduates to enter the modern society as a skilled and attractive work-force. In this contribution, I present an example of a successful organisation of international astrophysics studies in a developing country, which aims to become a leading graduate program in astrophysics in the broader region. I will focus on the benefits of the project showing why and in what way astronomy can be interesting for third world countries, what are the benefits for the individual students, nation and region, but also research, science and the astronomical community in general.Comment: proceedings of IAU SpS5, Astronomy for the Developing world, eds. J. Hearnshaw & P. Martine

    Kinemetry: a generalisation of photometry to the higher moments of the line-of-sight velocity distribution

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    We present a generalisation of surface photometry to the higher-order moments of the line-of-sight velocity distribution of galaxies observed with integral-field spectrographs. The generalisation follows the approach of surface photometry by determining the best fitting ellipses along which the profiles of the moments can be extracted and analysed by means of harmonic expansion. The assumption for the odd moments (e.g. mean velocity) is that the profile along an ellipse satisfies a simple cosine law. The assumption for the even moments (e.g velocity dispersion) is that the profile is constant, as it is used in surface photometry. We find that velocity profiles extracted along ellipses of early-type galaxies are well represented by the simple cosine law (with 2% accuracy), while possible deviations are carried in the fifth harmonic term which is sensitive to the existence of multiple kinematic components, and has some analogy to the shape parameter of photometry. We compare the properties of the kinematic and photometric ellipses and find that they are often very similar. Finally, we offer a characterisation of the main velocity structures based only on the kinemetric parameters which can be used to quantify the features in velocity maps (abridged).Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures. MNRAS in press. High resolution version of the paper is available at http://www.strw.leidenuniv.nl/sauron/papers/krajnovic2005_kinemetry.pdf and software implementation of the method is freely available at http://www-astro.physics.ox.ac.uk/~dxk/idl

    Measuring the low mass end of the Mbh - sigma relation

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    We show that high quality laser guide star (LGS) adaptive optics (AO) observations of nearby early-type galaxies are possible when the tip-tilt correction is done by guiding on nuclei while the focus compensation due to the changing distance to the sodium layer is made 'open loop'. We achieve corrections such that 40% of flux comes from R<0.2 arcsec. To measure a black hole mass (Mbh) one needs integral field observations of both high spatial resolution and large field of view. With these data it is possible to determine the lower limit to Mbh even if the spatial resolution of the observations are up to a few times larger than the sphere of influence of the black hole.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, LaTeX. To appear in "Hunting for the Dark: The Hidden Side of Galaxy Formation", Malta, 19-23 Oct. 2009, eds. V.P. Debattista and C.C. Popescu, AIP Conf. Ser., in pres

    A way to deal with the fringe-like pattern in VIMOS-IFU data

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    The use of integral field units is now commonplace at all major observatories offering efficient means of obtaining spectral as well as imaging information at the same time. IFU instrument designs are complex and spectral images have typically highly condensed formats, therefore presenting challenges for the IFU data reduction pipelines. In the case of the VLT VIMOS-IFU, a fringe-like pattern affecting the spectra well into the optical and blue wavelength regime as well as artificial intensity variations, require additional reduction steps beyond standard pipeline processing. In this research note we propose an empirical method for the removal of the fringe-like pattern in the spectral domain and the intensity variations in the imaging domain. We also demonstrate the potential consequences for data analysis if the effects are not corrected. Here we use the example of deriving stellar velocity, velocity dispersion and absorption line-strength maps for early-type galaxies. We derive for each spectrum, reduced by the ESO standard VIMOS pipeline, a correction-spectrum by using the median of the eight surrounding spectra as a proxy for the unaffected, underlying spectrum. This method relies on the fact that our science targets (nearby ETGs) cover the complete FoV of the VIMOS-IFU with slowly varying spectral properties and that the exact shape of the fringe-like pattern is nearly independent and highly variable between neighboring spatial positions. We find that the proposed correction methods for the removal of the fringe-like pattern and the intensity variations in VIMOS-IFU data-cubes are suitable to allow for meaningful data analysis in our sample of nearby early-type galaxies. Since the method relies on the scientific target properties it is not suitable for general implementation in the pipeline software for VIMOS.Comment: 7 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in A&A, new version after comments from language edito

    Evidence of boosted 13CO/12CO ratio in early-type galaxies in dense environments

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    We present observations of 13^{13}CO(1-0) in 17 Combined Array for Research in Millimeter Astronomy (CARMA) Atlas3D early-type galaxies (ETGs), obtained simultaneously with 12^{12}CO(1-0) observations. The 13^{13}CO in six ETGs is sufficiently bright to create images. In these 6 sources, we do not detect any significant radial gradient in the 13^{13}CO/12^{12}CO ratio between the nucleus and the outlying molecular gas. Using the 12^{12}CO channel maps as 3D masks to stack the 13^{13}CO emission, we are able to detect 15/17 galaxies to >3σ>3\sigma (and 12/17 to at least 5σ\sigma) significance in a spatially integrated manner. Overall, ETGs show a wide distribution of 13^{13}CO/12^{12}CO ratios, but Virgo cluster and group galaxies preferentially show a 13^{13}CO/12^{12}CO ratio about 2 times larger than field galaxies, although this could also be due to a mass dependence, or the CO spatial extent (RCO/ReR_{\rm CO}/R_{\rm e}). ETGs whose gas has a morphologically-settled appearance also show boosted 13^{13}CO/12^{12}CO ratios. We hypothesize that this variation could be caused by (i) the extra enrichment of gas from molecular reprocessing occurring in low-mass stars (boosting the abundance of 13^{13}C to 12^{12}C in the absence of external gas accretion), (ii) much higher pressure being exerted on the midplane gas (by the intracluster medium) in the cluster environment than in isolated galaxies, or (iii) all but the densest molecular gas clumps being stripped as the galaxies fall into the cluster. Further observations of 13^{13}CO in dense environments, particularly of spirals, as well as studies of other isotopologues, should be able to distinguish between these hypotheses.Comment: 13 pages, 3 tables, 7 figures, accepted by MNRA

    Dynamical modelling of stars and gas in NGC2974: determination of mass-to-light ratio, inclination and orbital structure by Schwarzschild's method

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    We study the large-scale stellar and gaseous kinematics of the E4 galaxy NGC2974, based on panoramic integral-field data obtained with SAURON. We quantify the velocity fields with Fourier methods (kinemetry), and show that the large-scale kinematics is largely consistent with axisymmetry. We construct general axisymmetric dynamical models for the stellar motions using Schwarzschild's orbit-superposition method, and compare the inferred inclination and mass-to-light ratio with the values obtained by modelling the gas kinematics. Both approaches give consistent results. However we find that the stellar models provide fairly weak constraints on the inclination. The intrinsic orbital distribution of NGC2974, which we infer from our model, is characterised by a large-scale stellar component of high angular momentum. We create semi-analytic test models, resembling NGC2974, to study the ability of Schwarzschild's modelling technique to recover the given input parameters (mass-to-light ratio and inclination) and the distribution function. We also test the influence of a limited spatial coverage on the recovery of the distribution function (i.e. the orbital structure). We find that the models can accurately recover the input mass-to-light ratio, but we confirm that even with perfect input kinematics the inclination is only marginally constrained. This suggests a possible degeneracy in the determination of the inclination, but further investigations are needed to clarify this issue. For a given potential, we find that the analytic distribution function of our test model is well recovered by the three-integral model within the spatial region constrained by integral-field kinematics.Comment: 22 pages, 24 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS. Version with full resolution images available at http://www.strw.leidenuniv.nl/sauron/papers/krajnovic2004_ngc2974.pd

    The impact of AGN on stellar kinematics and orbits in simulated massive galaxies

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    We present a series of 20 cosmological zoom simulations of the formation of massive galaxies with and without a model for AGN feedback. Differences in stellar population and kinematic properties are evaluated by constructing mock integral field unit (IFU) maps. The impact of the AGN is weak at high redshift when all systems are mostly fast-rotating and disc-like. After z1z \sim 1 the AGN simulations result in lower mass, older, less metal rich and slower rotating systems with less disky isophotes - in general agreement with observations. Two-dimensional kinematic maps of in-situ and accreted stars show that these differences result from reduced in-situ star formation due to AGN feedback. A full analysis of stellar orbits indicates that galaxies simulated with AGN are typically more triaxial and have higher fractions of x-tubes and box orbits and lower fractions of z-tubes. This trend can also be explained by reduced late in-situ star formation. We introduce a global parameter, ξ3\xi_3 , to characterise the anti-correlation between the third-order kinematic moment h3h_3 and the line-of-sight velocity (vlos/σv_{los}/{\sigma}), and compare to ATLAS3D^{3D} observations. The kinematic asymmetry parameter ξ3\xi_3 might be a useful diagnostic for large integral field surveys as it is a kinematic indicator for intrinsic shape and orbital content
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