1,636 research outputs found
A Nitrogen-rich SNR in M31: SNR Interaction with the CSM at Late Times
We present the discovery of a supernova remnant (SNR) in M31 which is unlike
any other remnant known in that galaxy. An optical MMT spectrum of WB92-26
sampling most of this marginally resolved object reveals strong lines of [O
II], [Ne III], H I, [O III], [O I], [N II] and [S II], though the H I lines are
very weak and the [N II] lines are very strong. Multiple velocity components
are visible in those lines, with broad wings extending to and
or km/s (the heliocentric velocity of M31 is km/s). The lines
show strong peaks or shoulders near km/s, km/s, and km/s in
the M31 frame.
The density implied by the [S II] ratio combined with the X-ray luminosity,
FUV flux and optical size lead us to conclude that the optical emission lines
are generated by shock waves, not photoionization. Consideration of the
velocity structure indicates that the emission is from a shock in the
circumstellar medium (CSM). This CSM must be depleted in H and enriched in He
and N through CNO processing, and it must have had a high velocity before the
explosion of the parent star, to explain the broad wings in the emission lines.
We estimate the CSM shell to have a mass of 2 Msun, implying a Core Collapse
SN. It is likely that Eta Car will produce a remnant resembling WB92-26 a few
thousand years after it explodes.Comment: to appear in Ap
The Dwarf Spheroidal Companions to M31: WFPC2 Observations of Andromeda I
Images have been obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope WFPC2 camera of
Andromeda I, a dwarf spheroidal (dSph) galaxy that lies in the outer halo of
M31. The resulting color-magnitude diagrams reveal for the first time the
morphology of the horizontal branch in this system. We find that, in a similar
fashion to many of the galactic dSph companions, the horizontal branch (HB) of
And~I is predominantly red. Combined with the metal abundance of this dSph,
this red HB morphology indicates that And I can be classified as a ``second
parameter'' system in the outer halo of M31. This result then supports the
hypothesis that the outer halo of M31 formed in the same extended chaotic
manner as is postulated for the outer halo of the Galaxy.Comment: 26 pages using aas2pp4.sty, including 2 tables and 7 figures, to be
published in AJ. Figure 1 is in gif form. To include in main ps file, use xv
to create a ps file called Da_Costa.fig1.ps and uncomment appropriate lines
in .tex fil
The Butcher-Oemler Effect at Low Redshift: Spectroscopy of Five Nearby Clusters of Galaxies
We present multi-fiber spectroscopy and broadband imaging of early-type
galaxies in five nearby rich clusters of galaxies. The main purpose was to look
for ``abnormal'' spectrum galaxies (i.e., post-starburst galaxies which have
strong Balmer absorption lines and emission line galaxies) in nearby clusters
that are similar to those found by Caldwell et al. (1993) in the Coma cluster.
Our primary conclusion is that 15% of the early-type galaxies in these nearby
rich clusters have signs of ongoing or recent star formation. Thus activity
similar to that seen in distant clusters is still ongoing, at a reduced level,
in present-epoch rich clusters. The frequency of such galaxies appears to be
enhanced significantly over that seen in field galaxies. Most of the new
post-starburst galaxies are disk galaxies; three E galaxies in one cluster and
one in another cluster have current star formation.
We also find evidence in the spatial and kinematic structure of several of
the clusters that subclusters have recently passed through the main clusters
and are now emerging out the other side. If, as we suspect, the subclusters
passed through the main clusters more than 1 Gyr ago, then the post-starburst
timescales of 1 Gyr imply that the star formation bursts are only triggered
during (or after) the subcluster passage through the center of the main
cluster.Comment: To appear in the Astronomical Journal. 68 pages including 24 pages of
figures. To include the gif images of Fig 12 in postscript form, use xv to
change gif to ps with names as given in the tex file, and uncomment the
appropriate lines in the figure caption area of tex fil
Spectrophotometry of nearby field galaxies: the data
We have obtained integrated and nuclear spectra, as well as U, B, R surface
photometry, for a representative sample of 196 nearby galaxies. These galaxies
span the entire Hubble sequence in morphological type, as well as a wide range
of luminosities (M_B=-14 to -22). Here we present the spectrophotometry for
these galaxies. The selection of the sample and the U, B, R surface photometry
is described in a companion paper (Paper I). Our goals for the project include
measuring the current star formation rates and metallicities of these galaxies,
and elucidating their star formation histories, as a function of luminosity and
morphology. We thereby extend the work of Kennicutt (1992a) to lower luminosity
systems. We anticipate that our study will be useful as a benchmark for studies
of galaxies at high redshift.
We describe the observing, data reduction and calibration techniques, and
demonstrate that our spectrophotometry agrees well with that of Kennicutt. The
spectra span the range 3550--7250 A at a resolution (FWHM) of ~6 A, and have an
overall relative spectrophotometric accuracy of +/- 6 per cent. We present a
spectrophotometric atlas of integrated and nuclear rest-frame spectra, as well
as tables of equivalent widths and synthetic colors.
We study the correlations of galaxy properties determined from the spectra
and images. Our findings include: (1) galaxies of a given morphological class
display a wide range of continuum shapes and emission line strengths if a broad
range of luminosities are considered, (2) emission line strengths tend to in-
crease and continua tend to get bluer as the luminosity decreases, and (3) the
scatter on the general correlation between nuclear and integrated H_alpha
emission line strengths is large.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJS (scheduled for Vol.127, 2000 March);
63 pages, LateX, 9 figures and 6 tables included, a spectrophotometric atlas
is provided as GIF images, fig 1 as a JPEG image, in a single tar-file; a
full 600 dpi version is available at http://www.astro.rug.nl/~nfgs
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