287 research outputs found
Emission line gas in early-type galaxies: Kinematics and physical conditions
Recent studies have found line emission gas in nearby early-type galaxies, but the properties of the emission-line gas in these 'normal' galaxies remain enigmatic. In terms of activity in the nucleus, these LINER-like galaxies form an important link between giant H 2 region galaxies and low-luminosity Seyferts. Despite their large numbers and evolutionary significance, we do not know whether these galaxies form a homogeneous class of objects; nor do we know how the distribution and kinematics of the line emission gas are affected by the host galaxy's environment or by the properties of the central engine, if present. To address these issues we are conducting a magnitude and volume limited survey of nearby early-type galaxies at Lick Observatory and the Michigan-Dartmouth-MIT Observatory. We have selected approximately 100 galaxies from radio catalogs. A large sample is necessary because while studies of individual 'LINERS' have led to a certain understanding of the phenomenon, these studies have not provided a global framework. Here we present results from our first run of medium resolution (approximately 5 A FWHM) spectroscopy. Kinematic data and line ratios determined along the major and minor axes of 6 galaxies are discussed. The information gleaned from spectroscopic data, when combined with data at other wavelengths, will enable a thorough investigation into the nature of low luminosity nuclear activity
Spectrophotometry of Michigan-Tololo quasars
Emission-line quasar characteristics are confirmed for 80% of the objects observed, including at least four new quasars with spectral features indicative of supernova-like outflow. Approximately 73% of the redshifts predicted from the discovery plates are found accurate with a mean error in z of 0.03, and a large range of z (from about 0.1 to 3.16) is represented in the sample. The observed redshift distribution for quasars is marginally consistent with a constant co-moving quasar density above z approximately 2.0. The shape of the redshift distribution may be used as an isotropy probe with a cosmic time resolution of a few times one-hundred million years in the early universe; therefore, continued surveys of this sort are important even if accurate magnitudes are not determined
The Nature of [Ar III] Bright Knots in the Crab Nebula
The kinematic and morphological properties of a string of [Ar III] bright
knots in the Crab Nebula are examined using 1994 - 1999 HST WFPC-2 images of
the remnant. We find that five southern [Ar III] bright knots exhibit ordinary
radial motions away from the nebula's center of expansion with magnitudes
consistent with their projected radial displacements. These results do not
support the suggestion by MacAlpine et al.(1994) that these knots might be
moving rapidly away from the Crab pulsar due to a collimated wind. The HST
images also do not show that the [Ar III] knots have unusual morphologies
relative to other features in the remnant. Our proper motion results, when
combined with radial velocity estimates, suggest these knots have relatively
low space velocities implying relatively interior remnant locations thus
placing them closer to the ionizing radiation from the Crab's synchrotron
nebula. This might lead to higher knot gas temperatures thereby explaining the
knots' unusual line emission strengths as MacAlpine et al.(1994) suspected.Comment: 11 pages including three figures. Submitted to the Astronomical
Journa
A Search for Nitrogen Enriched Quasars in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Early Data Release
A search for nitrogen-rich quasars in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Early Data
Release (SDSS EDR) catalog has yielded 16 candidates, including five with very
prominent emission, but no cases with nitrogen emission as strong as in
Q0353-383. The quasar Q0353-383 has long been known to have extremely strong
nitrogen intercombination lines at lambda 1486 and lambda 1750 Angstroms,
implying an anomalously high nitrogen abundance of about 15 times solar. It is
still the only one of its kind known. A preliminary search through the EDR
using the observed property of the weak C IV emission seen in Q0353-383
resulted in a sample of 23 objects with unusual emission or absorption-line
properties, including one very luminous redshift 2.5 star-forming galaxy. We
present descriptions, preliminary emission-line measurements, and spectra for
all the objects discussed here.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figures, submitted to AJ; final refereed versio
Emission-Line Galaxy Surveys as Probes of the Spatial Distribution of Dwarf Galaxies. I. The University of Michigan Survey
Objective-prism surveys which select galaxies on the basis of line-emission
are extremely effective at detecting low-luminosity galaxies and constitute
some of the deepest available samples of dwarfs. In this study, we confirm that
emission-line galaxies (ELGs) in the University of Michigan (UM)
objective-prism survey (MacAlpine et al. 1977-1981) are reliable tracers of
large-scale structure, and utilize the depth of the samples to examine the
spatial distribution of low-luminosity (M -18.0) dwarfs relative to
higher luminosity giant galaxies (M -18.0) in the Updated Zwicky
Catalogue (Falco et al. 1999). New spectroscopic data are presented for 26 UM
survey objects. We analyze the relative clustering properties of the overall
starbursting ELG and normal galaxy populations, using nearest neighbor and
correlation function statistics. This allows us to determine whether the
activity in ELGs is primarily caused by gravitational interactions. We conclude
that galaxy-galaxy encounters are not the sole cause of activity in ELGs since
ELGs tend to be more isolated and are more often found in the voids when
compared to their normal galaxy counterparts. Furthermore, statistical analyses
performed on low-luminosity dwarf ELGs show that the dwarfs are less clustered
when compared to their non-active giant neighbors. The UM dwarf samples have
greater percentages of nearest neighbor separations at large values and lower
correlation function amplitudes relative to the UZC giant galaxy samples. These
results are consistent with the expectations of galaxy biasing.Comment: 17 pages, 4 tables, 10 figures. Accepted for publication in the Ap
Trapped Ion Imaging with a High Numerical Aperture Spherical Mirror
Efficient collection and analysis of trapped ion qubit fluorescence is
essential for robust qubit state detection in trapped ion quantum computing
schemes. We discuss simple techniques of improving photon collection efficiency
using high numerical aperture (N.A.) reflective optics. To test these
techniques we placed a spherical mirror with an effective N.A. of about 0.9
inside a vacuum chamber in the vicinity of a linear Paul trap. We demonstrate
stable and reliable trapping of single barium ions, in excellent agreement with
our simulations of the electric field in this setup. While a large N.A.
spherical mirror introduces significant spherical aberration, the ion image
quality can be greatly improved by a specially designed aspheric corrector lens
located outside the vacuum system. Our simulations show that the spherical
mirror/corrector design is an easy and cost-effective way to achieve high
photon collection rates when compared to a more sophisticated parabolic mirror
setup.Comment: 5 figure
Carbon stars at high Galactic latitude
Photometry and kinematics are presented for a sample of objective prism selected carbon stars towards the north and south Galactic poles. Distances are determined by fitting the infrared colors to a giant branch. If these stars are like the carbon stars seen in dwarf spheroidal galaxies, the median distance of the sample is 28 kpc. If they are more like the carbon stars found recently in the Galactic bulge, they may be only half as distant. The surface density of carbon stars as a function of distance is remarkably consistent with an R^(1/4) density profile for the Galactic halo. This density profile can be traced to ≈ 15 scale radii and fills a volume similar to that occupied by globular clusters. The data yield an effective
radius of either 7.0 or 3.5 kpc depending on choice of distance scale. The velocity dispersion of the sample is 96 + 12 km/s. A kinematic model in which vertical velocity dispersion is independent of height above the Galactic plane seems in best accord with the data
The Intrinsic Absorber in QSO 2359-1241: Keck and HST Observations
We present detailed analyses of the absorption spectrum seen in QSO 2359-1241
(NVSS J235953-124148). Keck HIRES data reveal absorption from twenty
transitions arising from: He I, Mg I, Mg II, Ca II, and Fe II. HST data show
broad absorption lines (BALs) from Al III 1857, C IV 1549, Si IV 1397, and N V
1240. Absorption from excited Fe II states constrains the temperature of the
absorber to 2000K < T < 10,000K and puts a lower limit of 10^5 cm^{-3} on the
electron number density. Saturation diagnostics show that the real column
densities of He I and Fe II can be determined, allowing to derive meaningful
constraints on the ionization equilibrium and abundances in the flow. The
ionization parameter is constrained by the iron, helium and magnesium data to
-3.0 < log(U) < -2.5 and the observed column densities can be reproduced
without assuming departure from solar abundances. From comparison of the He I
and Fe II absorption features we infer that the outflow seen in QSO 2359-1241
is not shielded by a hydrogen ionization front and therefore that the existence
of low-ionization species in the outflow (e.g., Mg II, Al III, Fe II) does not
necessitate the existence of such a front. We find that the velocity width of
the absorption systematically increases as a function of ionization and to a
lesser extent with abundance. Complementary analyses of the radio and
polarization properties of the object are discussed in a companion paper
(Brotherton et al. 2000).Comment: 30 pages, 9 figures, in press with the Ap
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