198 research outputs found
Internal kinematics of isolated modelled disk galaxies
We present a systematic investigation of rotation curves (RCs) of fully
hydrodynamically simulated galaxies, including cooling, star formation with
associated feedback and galactic winds. Applying two commonly used fitting
formulae to characterize the RCs, we investigate systematic effects on the
shape of RCs both by observational constraints and internal properties of the
galaxies. We mainly focus on effects that occur in measurements of intermediate
and high redshift galaxies. We find that RC parameters are affected by the
observational setup, like slit misalignment or the spatial resolution and also
depend on the evolution of a galaxy. Therefore, a direct comparison of
quantities derived from measured RCs with predictions of semi-analytic models
is difficult. The virial velocity V_c, which is usually calculated and used by
semi-analytic models can differ significantly from fit parameters like V_max or
V_opt inferred from RCs. We find that V_c is usually lower than typical
characteristic velocities derived from RCs. V_max alone is in general not a
robust estimator for the virial mass.Comment: 9 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Internal kinematics of modelled interacting disc galaxies
We present an investigation of galaxy-galaxy interactions and their effects
on the velocity fields of disc galaxies in combined N-body/hydrodynamic
simulations, which include cooling, star formation with feedback, and galactic
winds. Rotation curves (RCs) of the gas are extracted from these simulations in
a way that follows the procedure applied to observations of distant, small, and
faint galaxies as closely as possible. We show that galaxy-galaxy mergers and
fly-bys disturb the velocity fields significantly and hence the RCs of the
interacting galaxies, leading to asymmetries and distortions in the RCs.
Typical features of disturbed kinematics are significantly rising or falling
profiles in the direction of the companion galaxy and pronounced bumps in the
RCs. In addition, tidal tails can leave strong imprints on the rotation curve.
All these features are observable for intermediate redshift galaxies, on which
we focus our investigations. We use a quantitative measure for the asymmetry of
rotation curves to show that the appearance of these distortions strongly
depends on the viewing angle. We also find in this way that the velocity fields
settle back into relatively undisturbed equilibrium states after unequal mass
mergers and fly-bys. About 1 Gyr after the first encounter, the RCs show no
severe distortions anymore. These results are consistent with previous
theoretical and observational studies. As an illustration of our results, we
compare our simulated velocity fields and direct images with rotation curves
from VLT/FORS spectroscopy and ACS images of a cluster at z=0.53 and find
remarkable similarities.Comment: 13 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in A&A, some
improvements and changes, main conclusions are unaffecte
The effects of ram-pressure stripping on the internal kinematics of simulated spiral galaxies
We investigate the influence of ram-pressure stripping on the internal gas
kinematics of simulated spiral galaxies. Additional emphasis is put on the
question of how the resulting distortions of the gaseous disc are visible in
the rotation curve and/or the full 2D velocity field of galaxies at different
redshifts. A Milky-Way type disc galaxy is modelled in combined
N-body/hydrodynamic simulations with prescriptions for cooling, star formation,
stellar feedback, and galactic winds. This model galaxy moves through a
constant density and temperature gas, which has parameters similar to the
intra-cluster medium (ICM). Rotation curves (RCs) and 2D velocity fields of the
gas are extracted from these simulations in a way that follows the procedure
applied to observations of distant, small, and faint galaxies as closely as
possible. We find that the appearance of distortions of the gaseous disc due to
ram-pressure stripping depends on the direction of the acting ram pressure. In
the case of face-on ram pressure, the distortions mainly appear in the outer
parts of the galaxy in a very symmetric way. In contrast, in the case of
edge-on ram pressure we find stronger distortions. The 2D velocity field also
shows signatures of the interaction in the inner part of the disc. At angles
smaller than 45 degrees between the ICM wind direction and the disc, the
velocity field asymmetry increases significantly compared to larger angles.
Compared to distortions caused by tidal interactions, the effects of
ram-pressure stripping on the velocity field are relatively low in all cases
and difficult to observe at intermediate redshift in seeing-limited
observations. (abridged)Comment: 9 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Searching for binary central stars of planetary nebulae with Kepler
The Kepler Observatory offers unprecedented photometric precision (<1 mmag)
and cadence for monitoring the central stars of planetary nebulae, allowing the
detection of tiny periodic light curve variations, a possible signature of
binarity. With this precision free from the observational gaps dictated by
weather and lunar cycles, we are able to detect companions at much larger
separations and with much smaller radii than ever before. We have been awarded
observing time to obtain light-curves of the central stars of the six confirmed
and possible planetary nebulae in the Kepler field, including the newly
discovered object Kn 61, at cadences of both 30 min and 1 min. Of these six
objects, we could confirm for three a periodic variability consistent with
binarity. Two others are variables, but the initial data set presents only weak
periodicities. For the central star of Kn 61, Kepler data will be available in
the near future
2D velocity fields of simulated interacting disc galaxies
We investigate distortions in the velocity fields of disc galaxies and their
use to reveal the dynamical state of interacting galaxies at different
redshift. For that purpose, we model disc galaxies in combined
N-body/hydrodynamic simulations. 2D velocity fields of the gas are extracted
from these simulations which we place at different redshifts from z=0 to z=1 to
investigate resolution effects on the properties of the velocity field. To
quantify the structure of the velocity field we also perform a kinemetry
analysis. If the galaxy is undisturbed we find that the rotation curve
extracted from the 2D field agrees well with long-slit rotation curves. This is
not true for interacting systems, as the kinematic axis is not well defined and
does in general not coincide with the photometric axis of the system. For large
(Milky way type) galaxies we find that distortions are still visible at
intermediate redshifts but partly smeared out. Thus a careful analysis of the
velocity field is necessary before using it for a Tully-Fisher study. For small
galaxies (disc scale length ~2 kpc) even strong distortions are not visible in
the velocity field at z~0.5 with currently available angular resolution.
Therefore we conclude that current distant Tully-Fisher studies cannot give
reliable results for low-mass systems. Additionally to these studies we confirm
the power of near-infrared integral field spectrometers in combination with
adaptive optics (such as SINFONI) to study velocity fields of galaxies at high
redshift (z~2).Comment: 12 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in A&A, high
resolution version can be found at
http://astro.uibk.ac.at/~thomas/kronberger.pd
Characterization of nematic liquid crystals at microwave frequencies
The use of nematic liquid crystal (LC) mixtures for microwave frequency applications presents a fundamental drawback: many of these mixtures have not been properly characterized at these frequencies, and researchers do not have an a priori clear idea of which behavior they can expect. This work is focused on developing a new procedure for the extraction of the main parameters of a nematic liquid crystal: dielectric permittivity and loss tangent at 11 GHz under different polarization voltages; splay elastic constant K11, which allows calculation of the threshold voltage (Vth); and rotational viscosity ¿11, which allows calculating the response time of any arbitrary device. These properties will be calculated by using a resonator-based method, which is implemented with a new topology of substrate integrated transmission line. The LC molecules should be rotated (polarized) by applying an electric field in order to extract the characteristic parameters; thus, the transmission line needs to have two conductors and low electric losses in order to preserve the integrity of the measurements. This method was applied to a well-known liquid crystal mixture (GT3-23002 from MERCK) obtaining the permittivity and loss tangent versus bias voltage curves, the splay elastic constant, and the rotational viscosity of the mixture. The results validate the viability of the proposed method
Internal kinematics of spiral galaxies in distant clusters III. Velocity fields from FORS2/MXU spectroscopy
(Abridged) We study the impact of cluster environment on the evolution of
spiral galaxies by examining their structure and kinematics. Rather than
two-dimensional rotation curves, we observe complete velocity fields by placing
three adjacent and parallel FORS2 MXU slits on each object, yielding several
emission and absorption lines. The gas velocity fields are reconstructed and
decomposed into circular rotation and irregular motions using kinemetry. To
quantify irregularities in the gas kinematics, we define three parameters:
sigma_{PA} (standard deviation of the kinematic position angle), Delta phi (the
average misalignment between kinematic and photometric position angles) and
k_{3,5} (squared sum of the higher order Fourier terms). Using local,
undistorted galaxies from SINGS, these can be used to establish the regularity
of the gas velocity fields. Here we present the analysis of 22 distant galaxies
in the MS0451.6-0305 field with 11 members at z=0.54. In this sample we find
both field (4 out of 8) and cluster (3 out of 4) galaxies with velocity fields
that are both irregular and asymmetric. We show that these fractions are
underestimates of the actual number of galaxies with irregular velocity fields.
The values of the (ir)regularity parameters for cluster galaxies are not very
different from those of the field galaxies, implying that there are isolated
field galaxies that are as distorted as the cluster members. None of the
deviations in our small sample correlate with photometric/structural properties
like luminosity or disk scale length in a significant way.
Our 3D-spectroscopic method successfully maps the velocity field of distant
galaxies, enabling the importance and efficiency of cluster specific
interactions to be assessed quantitatively.Comment: accepted for publication in A&A, high resolution version available at
http://www.astro.rug.nl/~kutdemir/papers
Rotation curve bifurcations as indicators of close recent galaxy encounters
Rotation curves of interacting galaxies often show that velocities are either
rising or falling in the direction of the companion galaxy. We seek to
reproduce and analyse these features in the rotation curves of simulated
equal-mass galaxies suffering a one-to-one encounter, as possible indicators of
close encounters. Using simulations of major mergers in 3D, we study the time
evolution of these asymmetries in a pair of galaxies, during the first passage.
Our main results are: (a) the rotation curve asymmetries appear right at
pericentre of the first passage, (b) the significant disturbed rotation
velocities occur within a small time interval, of ~ 0.5 Gyr h^-1, and therefore
the presence of bifurcation in the velocity curve could be used as an indicator
of the pericentre occurrence. These results are in qualitative agreement with
previous findings for minor mergers and fly-byes.Comment: 4 pages, 7 figure
Open cluster survival within the solar circle: Teutsch145 and Teutsch146
Teutsch145 and Teutsch146 are shown to be open clusters (OCs) orbiting well
inside the Solar circle, a region where several dynamical processes combine to
disrupt most OCs on a time-scale of a few 10^8yrs. BVI photometry from the
GALILEO telescope is used to investigate the nature and derive the fundamental
and structural parameters of the optically faint and poorly-known OCs
Teutsch145 and 146. These parameters are computed by means of field-star
decontaminated colour-magnitude diagrams (CMDs) and stellar radial density
profiles (RDPs). Cluster mass estimates are made based on the intrinsic mass
functions (MFs). We derive the ages 200+100-50Myr and 400+/-100Myr, and the
distances from the Sun 2.7+/-0.3kpc and 3.8+/-0.2kpc, respectively for
Teutsch145 and 146. Their integrated apparent and absolute magnitudes are m_V ~
12.4, m_V ~ 13.3, M_V ~- 5.6 and M_V ~- 5.3. The MFs (detected for stars with
m>1Msun) have slopes similar to Salpeter's IMF. Extrapolated to the H-burning
limit, the MFs would produce total stellar masses of ~1400Msun, typical of
relatively massive OCs. Both OCs are located deep into the inner Galaxy and
close to the Crux-Scutum arm. Since cluster-disruption processes are important,
their primordial masses must have been higher than the present-day values. The
conspicuous stellar density excess observed in the innermost bin of both RDPs
might reflect the dynamical effects induced by a few 10^8yrs of external tidal
stress.Comment: 8 pagas with 9 figs. Accepted by MNRA
Candidate planetary nebulae in the IPHAS photometric catalogue
Original article can be found at: http://www.aanda.org/ Copyright European Southern Observatory. DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/200912002Context. We have carried out a semi-automated search for planetary nebulae (PNe) in the INT photometric H-alpha survey (IPHAS) catalogue. We present the PN search and the list of selected candidates. We cross correlate the selected candidates with a number of existing infrared galactic surveys in order to gain further insight into the nature of the candidates. Spectroscopy of a subset of objects is used to estimate the number of PNe present in the entire candidate list. Aims. The overall aim of the IPHAS PN project is to carry out a deep census of PNe in the northern Galactic plane, an area where PN detections are clearly lacking. Methods. The PN search is carried out on the IPHAS photometric catalogue. The candidate selection is based on the IPHAS and 2MASS/UKIDSS colours of the objects and the final candidate selection is made visually. Results. From the original list of ~600 million IPHAS detections we have selected a total of 1005 objects. Of these, 224 are known objects, leaving us with 781 PN candidates. Based on the initial follow-up spectroscopy, we expect the list to include very young and proto-PNe in addition to genuine, normal PNe (~16%) and emission line objects other than PNe. We present additional criteria to select the most probable PN candidates from our candidate list.Peer reviewe
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