2,708 research outputs found
Missionally engaging our neighbors : equipping Christians to reach their neighbors for Christ
https://place.asburyseminary.edu/ecommonsatsdissertations/2478/thumbnail.jp
Near-Infrared Observations of Powerful High-Redshift Radio Galaxies: 4C 40.36 and 4C 39.37
We present near-infrared imaging and spectroscopic observations of two FR II
high-redshift radio galaxies (HzRGs), 4C 40.36 (z=2.3) and 4C 39.37 (z=3.2),
obtained with the Hubble, Keck, and Hale Telescopes. High resolution images
were taken with filters both in and out of strong emission lines, and together
with the spectroscopic data, the properties of the line and continuum emissions
were carefully analyzed. Our analysis of 4C 40.36 and 4C 39.37 shows that
strong emission lines (e.g., [O III] 5007 A and H alpha+[N II]) contribute to
the broad-band fluxes much more significantly than previously estimated (80%
vs. 20-40%), and that when the continuum sources are imaged through line-free
filters, they show an extremely compact morphology with a high surface
brightness. If we use the R^1/4-law parametrization, their effective radii
(r(e)) are only 2-3 kpc while their restframe B-band surface brightnesses at
r(e) are I(B) ~ 18 mag/arcsec^2. Compared with z ~ 1 3CR radio galaxies, the
former is x3-5 smaller, while the latter is 1-1.5 mag brighter than what is
predicted from the I(B)-r(e) correlation. Although exponential profiles produce
equally good fits for 4C 40.36 and 4C 39.37, this clearly indicates that with
respect to the z~1 3CR radio galaxies, the light distribution of these two
HzRGs is much more centrally concentrated. Spectroscopically, 4C 40.36 shows a
flat (fnu=const) continuum while 4C 39.37 shows a spectrum as red as that of a
local giant elliptical galaxy. Although this difference may be explained in
terms of a varying degree of star formation, the similarities of their surface
brightness profiles and the submillimeter detection of 4C 39.37 might suggest
that the intrinsic spectra is equally blue (young stars or an AGN), and that
the difference is the amount of reddening.Comment: 30 pages, 6 tables, 10 figures; Accepted for publication in
Astronomical Journa
Simulated Observations of Young Gravitationally Unstable Protoplanetary Discs
The formation and earliest stages of protoplanetary discs remain poorly
constrained by observations. ALMA will soon revolutionise this field.
Therefore, it is important to provide predictions which will be valuable for
the interpretation of future high sensitivity and high angular resolution
observations. Here we present simulated ALMA observations based on radiative
transfer modelling of a relatively massive (0.39 M_solar) self-gravitating disc
embedded in a 10 M_solar dense core, with structure similar to the pre-stellar
core L1544. We focus on simple species and conclude that C17O 3-2, HCO+ 3-2,
OCS 26-25 and H2CO 404-303 lines can be used to probe the disc structure and
kinematics at all scales.Comment: 12 pages, 15 figures, Accepted by MNRA
On Star Formation and the Non-Existence of Dark Galaxies
We investigate whether a baryonic dark galaxy or `galaxy without stars' could
persist indefinitely in the local universe, while remaining stable against star
formation. To this end, a simple model has been constructed to determine the
equilibrium distribution and composition of a gaseous protogalactic disk.
Specifically, we determine the amount of gas that will transit to a Toomre
unstable cold phase via the H2 cooling channel in the presence of a UV--X-ray
cosmic background radiation field.
All but one of the models are predicted to become unstable to star formation.
Moreover, we find that all our model objects would be detectable via HI line
emission, even in the case that star formation is potentially avoided. These
results are consistent with the non-detection of isolated extragalactic HI
clouds with no optical counterpart (galaxies without stars) by HIPASS.
Additionally, where star formation is predicted to occur, we determine the
minimum interstellar radiation field required to restore gravothermal
stability, which we then relate to a minimum global star formation rate. This
leads to the prediction of a previously undocumented relation between HI mass
and star formation rate that is observed for a wide variety of dwarf galaxies
in the HI mass range 10^8--10^10 M_sun. The existence of such a relation
strongly supports the notion that the well observed population of dwarf
galaxies represent the minimum rates of self-regulating star formation in the
universe. (Barely abridged)Comment: 19 pages, 8 figures, TeX using emulateapj.cls, v2 accepted for
publication in ApJ (16/8/5) with one figure deleted and a number of minor
clarifying revision
The Evolution of the Stellar Hosts of Radio Galaxies
We present new near-infrared images of z>0.8 radio galaxies from the
flux-limited 7C-III sample of radio sources for which we have recently obtained
almost complete spectroscopic redshifts. The 7C objects have radio luminosities
about 20 times fainter than 3C radio galaxies at a given redshift. The absolute
magnitudes of the underlying host galaxies and their scale sizes are only
weakly dependent on radio luminosity. Radio galaxy hosts at z~2 are
significantly brighter than the hosts of radio-quiet quasars at similar
redshifts and the model AGN hosts of Kauffmann & Haehnelt (2000). There is no
evidence for strong evolution in scale size, which shows a large scatter at all
redshifts. The hosts brighten significantly with redshift, consistent with the
passive evolution of a stellar population that formed at z>~3. This scenario is
consistent with studies of host galaxy morphology and submillimeter continuum
emission, both of which show strong evolution at z>~2.5. The lack of a strong
``redshift cutoff'' in the radio luminosity function to z>4 suggests that the
formation epoch of the radio galaxy host population lasts >~1Gyr from z>~5 to
z~3. We suggest these facts are best explained by models in which the most
massive galaxies and their associated AGN form early due to high baryon
densities in the centres of their dark matter haloes.Comment: To appear in A
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