24 research outputs found

    Interferometric Phase Calibration Sources in the Declination Range 0deg to -30deg

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    We present a catalog of 321 compact radio sources in the declination range 0deg > delta > -30deg. The positions of these sources have been measured with a two-dimensional rms accuracy of 35 milliarcseconds using the NRAO Very Large Array. Each source has a peak flux density >50 mJy at 8.4 GHz. We intend for this catalog to be used mainly for selection of phase calibration sources for radio interferometers, although compact radio sources have other scientific uses.Comment: 9 pages. To appear in ApJS. Catalog (Table 3) is abbreviated in printed version. Complete catalog available at ftp://ftp.aoc.nrao.edu/pub/staff/jwrobel/WPW2003_ApJS.tx

    PMN J1838-3427: A new gravitationally lensed quasar

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    We report the discovery of a new double-image quasar that was found during a search for gravitational lenses in the southern sky. Radio source PMN J1838-3427 is composed of two flat-spectrum components with separation 1", flux density ratio 14:1 and matching spectral indices, in VLA and VLBA images. Ground-based BRI images show the optical counterpart (total I=18.6) is also double with the same separation and position angle as the radio components. An HST/WFPC2 image reveals the lens galaxy. The optical flux ratio (27:1) is higher than the radio value probably due to differential extinction of the components by the lens galaxy. An optical spectrum of the bright component contains quasar emission lines at z=2.78 and several absorption features, including prominent Ly-alpha absorption. The lens galaxy redshift could not be measured but is estimated to be z=0.36 +/- 0.08. The image configuration is consistent with the simplest plausible models for the lens potential. The flat radio spectrum and observed variability of PMN J1838-3427 suggest the time delay between flux variations of the components is measurable, and could thus provide an independent measurement of H_0.Comment: 23 pages, incl. 6 figures, to appear in A.J.; replaced with accepted version; minor changes to text, improved figure

    Detection of new sources of methanol emission at 107 and 108 GHz with the Mopra telescope

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    A southern hemisphere survey of methanol emission sources in two millimeter wave transitions has been carried out using the ATNF Mopra millimetre telescope. Sixteen emission sources have been detected in the 3(1)-4(0)A+ transition of methanol at 107 GHz, including six new sources exhibiting class II methanol maser emission features. Combining these results with the similar northern hemisphere survey, a total of eleven 107-GHz methanol masers have been detected. A survey of the methanol emission in the 0(0)-1(-1)E transition at 108 GHz resulted in the detection of 16 sources; one of them showing maser characteristics. This is the first methanol maser detected at 108 GHz, presumably of class II. The results of LVG statistical equilibrium calculations confirm the classification of these new sources as a class II methanol masers.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS, mn.sty include

    XMM observations of the high-redshift quasar RXJ1028.6-0844 at z=4.276: soft X-ray spectral flattening

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    We present results from a new XMM-Newton observation of the high-redshift quasar RXJ1028.6-0844 at a redshift of 4.276. The soft X-ray spectral flattening, as reported by a study with ASCA previously (Yuan et al. 2000, ApJ 545, 625), is confirmed to be present, however, with reduced column density when modelled by absorption. The inferred column density for absorption intrinsic to the quasar is 2.1(+0.4-0.3)x10^22 (cm^-2) for cold matter, and higher for ionised gas. The spectral flattening shows remarkable similarity with those of two similar objects, GB1428+4217 (Worsley et al. 2004, MNRAS 350, L67) and PMNJ0525-3343 (Worsley et al. 2004, MNRAS 350, 207). The results improve upon those obtained from a previous short-exposure observation for RXJ1028.6-0844 with XMM-Newton (Grupe et al. 2004, AJ 127, 1). A comparative study of the two XMM-Newton observations reveals a change in the power-law photon index from Gamma ~1.3 to 1.5 on timescales of about one year. A tentative excess emission feature in the rest-frame 5-10keV band is suggested, which is similar to that marginally suggested for GB1428+4217.Comment: 9 pages, accepted for publication in MNRAS; minor changes (added footnote commenting on the use of the F-test, added references

    Detection of Cold Atomic Clouds in the Magellanic Bridge

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    We report a detection of cold atomic hydrogen in the Magellanic Bridge using 21-cm absorption spectroscopy toward the radio source B0312-770. With a column density of N_HI=1.2E20 cm^-2, a maximum absorption optical depth of tau=0.10 and a maximum 21-cm emission brightness temperature of 1.4 K, this line of sight yields a spin temperature, T_s, between 20 K and 40 K. H I 21-cm absorption and emission spectroscopy toward 7 other low column density sightlines on the periphery of the LMC and SMC reveal absorption toward one additional background radio source behind the SMC with tau=0.03. The data have typical sensitivities of sigma_tau=0.005 to 0.070 in absorption and sigma_{T_B}=0.03 K in emission. These data demonstrate the presence of a cold atomic phase which is probably accompanied by molecular condensations in the tenuous interstellar medium of the Bridge region. Young OB stars observed in the Magellanic Bridge could form "in situ" from these cold condensations rather than migrate from regions of active star formation in the main body of the SMC. The existence of cold condensations and star formation in the Magellanic Bridge might be understood as a small scale version of the mechanism that produces star formation in the tidal tails of interacting galaxies.Comment: 25 pages, uses AASTeX and psfig; Accepted for Publication in the Astronomical Journa

    Evidence of thick obscuring matter revealed in the X-ray spectrum of the Z=4.28 quasar RXJ1028.6-0844

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    We report the discovery of an unambiguous, substantial low-energy cutoff in the broad band X-ray spectrum of the radio quasar RXJ1028.6-0844 at a redshift of 4.276 obtained with the ASCA satellite, which we preferably explained as indication of excess X-ray absorption. The equivalent hydrogen column density of the absorbing matter, depending on the redshift and metallicity, ranges from 2.5x10**21 cm**(-2) for local absorption up to 2.1x10**23 cm**(-2) (solar metallicity) or 1.6x10**24 cm**(-2) (10% solar metallicity) for absorption at the quasar redshift. Such a value is among the largest found for high-redshift radio quasars. The absorption, if interpreted as being produced close to the quasar, may indicate the presence of a remarkably large amount of obscuring matter in the quasar environment in the early universe. Implications of the result for the possible origins of the absorbing matter are discussed, concerning especially galactic intervening matter, cool intracluster gas, and ambient medium around the quasar jet. The quasar itself has an enormous apparent luminosity of at least about 2.6x10**47 erg/s (H0=50, q0=0.5) and a power law photon index of 1.67(+0.07,-0.04) in the 2-50keV band in the source rest frame.Comment: Accepted by ApJ, 11 pages using emulateapj5.sty; minor changes (12 pages), subsection 3.4 added, references adde

    Tracing the evolutionary stage of Bok globules: CCS and NH3

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    We pursue the investigation of a previously proposed correlation between chemical properties and physical evolutionary stage of isolated low-mass star-forming regions. In the past, the NH3/CCS abundance ratio was suggested to be a potentially useful indicator for the evolutionary stage of cloud cores. We aim to study its applicability for isolated Bok globules. A sample of 42 Bok globules with and without signs of current star formation was searched for CCS(2-1) emission, the observations were complemented with NH3 measurements available in the literature and own observations. The abundance ratio of both molecules is discussed with respect to the evolutionary stage of the objects and in the context of chemical models. The NH3/CCS ratio could be assessed for 18 Bok globules and is found to be moderately high and roughly similar across all evolutionary stages from starless and prestellar cores towards internally heated cores harbouring protostars of Class 0, Class I or later. Bok globules with extremely high CCS abundance analogous to carbon-chain producing regions in dark cloud cores are not found. The observed range of NH3/CCS hints towards a relatively evolved chemical state of all observed Bok globules.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic

    Disks around the Young Stars TW Hya and HD 100546 Imaged at 3.4 Millimeters with the Australia Telescope Compact Array

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    We present observations of the young stars TW Hya and HD 100546 made with the Australia Telescope Compact Array at 89 GHz with 2\sim2'' resolution and 3\sim3 mJy continuum sensitivity. Compact thermal dust continuum emission is detected from disks surrounding both stars. HD 100546 also shows hints of extended emission, presumably a residual protostellar envelope, which is also visible in scattered light at optical wavelengths. For TW Hya, HCO+^+ J=1--0 line emission from the circumstellar disk is detected and spatially resolved. The observed size and intensity are in good agreement with model calculations based on an irradiated disk with substantial depletions derived previously from single dish observations of higher-J HCO+^+ transitions.Comment: 19 pages including 6 figures; accepted for publication in Ap

    Extragalactic Radio Continuum Surveys and the Transformation of Radio Astronomy

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    Next-generation radio surveys are about to transform radio astronomy by discovering and studying tens of millions of previously unknown radio sources. These surveys will provide new insights to understand the evolution of galaxies, measuring the evolution of the cosmic star formation rate, and rivalling traditional techniques in the measurement of fundamental cosmological parameters. By observing a new volume of observational parameter space, they are also likely to discover unexpected new phenomena. This review traces the evolution of extragalactic radio continuum surveys from the earliest days of radio astronomy to the present, and identifies the challenges that must be overcome to achieve this transformational change.Comment: To be published in Nature Astronomy 18 Sept 201
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