438 research outputs found
The morphology-density relation for dwarf galaxies
The morphology-density relation is examined for dwarf galaxies with absolute magnitudes -18 less than or equal to M sub B sub T less than or equal to -12.5, based on a deep photographic survey of nearby groups and clusters of galaxies. Results are given. Compared to dwarf ellipticals, dwarf irregulars form a more extended population in nearby clusters, and may in fact be entirely absent from the cluster cores. The spatial distribution of dwarf ellipticals in clusters depends on luminosity and the presence or absence of nucleation. Nucleated dE's and non-nucleated dE's fainter than M sub B sub T approx. -13.5 are concentrated toward the centers of clusters like the giant E and S0 galaxies. In contrast, non-nucleated dE's brighter than M sub B sub T approx. -14.5 are distributed like the spirals and irregulars. The intrinsic shapes of the bright non-nucleated dE's are similar to those of the dwarf irregulars, suggesting a possible evolutionary connection between these two classes of galaxies
Turbulence and turbulent mixing in natural fluids
Turbulence and turbulent mixing in natural fluids begins with big bang
turbulence powered by spinning combustible combinations of Planck particles and
Planck antiparticles. Particle prograde accretions on a spinning pair releases
42% of the particle rest mass energy to produce more fuel for turbulent
combustion. Negative viscous stresses and negative turbulence stresses work
against gravity, extracting mass-energy and space-time from the vacuum.
Turbulence mixes cooling temperatures until strong-force viscous stresses
freeze out turbulent mixing patterns as the first fossil turbulence. Cosmic
microwave background temperature anisotropies show big bang turbulence fossils
along with fossils of weak plasma turbulence triggered as plasma photon-viscous
forces permit gravitational fragmentation on supercluster to galaxy mass
scales. Turbulent morphologies and viscous-turbulent lengths appear as linear
gas-proto-galaxy-clusters in the Hubble ultra-deep-field at z~7. Proto-galaxies
fragment into Jeans-mass-clumps of primordial-gas-planets at decoupling: the
dark matter of galaxies. Shortly after the plasma to gas transition,
planet-mergers produce stars that explode on overfeeding to fertilize and
distribute the first life.Comment: 23 pages 12 figures, Turbulent Mixing and Beyond 2009 International
Center for Theoretical Physics conference, Trieste, Italy. Revision according
to Referee comments. Accepted for Physica Scripta Topical Issue to be
published in 201
The Age of the Oldest Stars in the Local Galactic Disk From Hipparcos Parallaxes of G and K Subgiants
We review the history of the discovery of field subgiant stars and their
importance in the age dating of the Galactic disk. We use the cataloged data
from the Hipparcos satellite in this latter capacity. Based on Hipparcos
parallaxes accurate to 10% or better, the absolute magnitude of the lower
envelope of the nearly horizontal subgiant sequence for field stars in the H-R
diagram for B-V colors between 0.85 and 1.05 is measured to be M_V = 4.03 +/-
0.06. The age of the field stars in the solar neighborhood is found to be 7.9
+/- 0.7 Gyr by fitting the theoretical isochrones for [Fe/H] = +0.37 to the
lower envelope of the Hipparcos subgiants. The same grid of isochrones yields
ages, in turn, of 4.0 +/- 0.2 Gyr, 6.2 +/- 0.5 Gyr, and 7.5 to 10 Gyr for the
old Galactic clusters M67, NGC188, and NGC6791. The ages of both the Galactic
disk in the solar neighborhood and of NGC6791 are, nevertheless, likely between
3 and 5 Gyr younger than the oldest halo globular clusters, which have ages of
13.5 Gyr. The most significant results are (1) the supermetallicity of the
oldest local disk stars, and (2) the large age difference between the most
metal-poor component of the halo and the thick and thin disk in the solar
neighborhood. These facts are undoubtedly related and pose again the problem of
the proper scenario for the timing of events in the formation of the halo and
the Galactic disk in the solar neighborhood. [Abstract Abridged]Comment: 44 pages, 12 Figures; accepted for publication in PASP; high
resolution versions of Figures 1, 2, 6 and 9 available at
http://bubba.ucdavis.edu/~lubin/Sandage
The relationship between the optical Halpha filaments and the X-ray emission in the core of the Perseus cluster
NGC 1275 in the centre of the Perseus cluster of galaxies, Abell 426, is
surrounded by a spectacular filamentary Halpha nebula. Deep Chandra X-ray
imaging has revealed that the brighter outer filaments are also detected in
soft X-rays. This can be due to conduction and mixing of the cold gas in the
filaments with the hot, dense intracluster medium. We show the correspondence
of the filaments in both wavebands and draw attention to the relationship of
two prominent curved NW filaments to an outer, buoyant radio bubble seen as a
hole in the X-ray image. There is a strong resemblance in the shape of the hole
and the disposition of the filaments to the behaviour of a large air bubble
rising in water. If this is a correct analogy, then the flow is laminar and the
intracluster gas around this radio source is not turbulent. We obtain a limit
on the viscosity of this gas.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
The Apparent Fractal Conjecture: Scaling Features in Standard Cosmologies
This paper presents an analysis of the smoothness problem in cosmology by
focussing on the ambiguities originated in the simplifying hypotheses aimed at
observationally verifying if the large-scale distribution of galaxies is
homogeneous, and conjecturing that this distribution should follow a fractal
pattern in perturbed standard cosmologies. This is due to a geometrical effect,
appearing when certain types of average densities are calculated along the past
light cone. The paper starts reviewing the argument concerning the possibility
that the galaxy distribution follows such a scaling pattern, and the premises
behind the assumption that the spatial homogeneity of standard cosmology can be
observable. Next, it is argued that to discuss observable homogeneity one needs
to make a clear distinction between local and average relativistic densities,
and showing how the different distance definitions strongly affect them,
leading the various average densities to display asymptotically opposite
behaviours. Then the paper revisits Ribeiro's (1995: astro-ph/9910145) results,
showing that in a fully relativistic treatment some observational average
densities of the flat Friedmann model are not well defined at z ~ 0.1, implying
that at this range average densities behave in a fundamentally different manner
as compared to the linearity of the Hubble law, well valid for z < 1. This
conclusion brings into question the widespread assumption that relativistic
corrections can always be neglected at low z. It is also shown how some key
features of fractal cosmologies can be found in the Friedmann models. In view
of those findings, it is suggested that the so-called contradiction between the
cosmological principle, and the galaxy distribution forming an unlimited
fractal structure, may not exist.Comment: 30 pages, 2 figures, LaTeX. This paper is a follow-up to
gr-qc/9909093. Accepted for publication in "General Relativity and
Gravitation
Blue Straggler Stars: Early Observations that Failed to Solve the Problem
In this chapter, I describe early ideas on blue stragglers, and various
observations (some published, some not) that promised but failed to resolve the
question of their origin. I review the data and ideas that were circulating
from Allan Sandage's original discovery in 1953 of "anomalous blue stars" in
the globular cluster M3, up until about 1992, when what seems to have been the
only previous meeting devoted to Blue Straggler Stars (BSSs) was held at the
Space Telescope Science Institute.Comment: Chapter 2, in Ecology of Blue Straggler Stars, H.M.J. Boffin, G.
Carraro & G. Beccari (Eds), Astrophysics and Space Science Library, Springe
The star formation properties of disk galaxies: Halpha imaging of galaxies in the Coma supercluster
We present integrated H alpha measurements obtained from imaging observations
of 98 late-type galaxies, primarily selected in the Coma supercluster. These
data, combined with H alpha photometry from the literature, include a magnitude
selected sample of spiral (Sa to Irr) galaxies belonging to the "Great Wall"
complete up to mp=15.4, thus composed of galaxies brighter than Mp=-18.8
(H0=100 km Mpc^-1 s^-1). The frequency distribution of the H alpha E.W.,
determined for the first time from an optically complete sample, is
approximately gaussian peaking at E.W. ~25 A. We find that, at the present
limiting luminosity, the star formation properties of spiral+Irr galaxies
members of the Coma and A1367 clusters do not differ significantly from those
of the isolated ones belonging to the Great Wall. The present analysis confirms
the well known increase of the current massive star formation rate (SFR) with
Hubble type. Moreover perhaps a more fundamental anticorrelation exists between
the SFR and the mass of disk galaxies: low-mass spirals and dwarf systems have
present SFRs ~50 times higher than giant spirals. This result is consistent
with the idea that disk galaxies are coeval, evolve as "closed systems" with
exponentially declining SFR and that the mass of their progenitor protogalaxies
is the principal parameter governing their evolution. Massive systems having
high initial efficiency of collapse, or a short collapse time-scale, have
retained little gas to feed the present epoch of star formation. These findings
support the conclusions of Gavazzi & Scodeggio (1996) who studyed the
color-mass relation of a local galaxy sample and agree with the analysis by
Cowie et al. (1996) who traced the star formation history of galaxies up to
z>1.Comment: 13 pages (LateX) + 24 figures + 4 tables. To appear in Astronomical
Journal, April 1998 issu
Very Luminous Carbon Stars in the Outer Disk of the Triangulum Spiral Galaxy
Stars with masses in the range from about 1.3 to 3.5 Mo pass through an
evolutionary stage where they become carbon stars. In this stage, which lasts a
few Myr, these stars are extremely luminous pulsating giants. They are so
luminous in the near-infrared that just a few of them can double the integrated
luminosity of intermediate-age (0.6 to 2 Gyr) Magellanic Cloud clusters at 2.2
microns. Astronomers routinely use such near-infrared observations to minimize
the effects of dust extinction, but it is precisely in this band that carbon
stars can contribute hugely. The actual contribution of carbon stars to the
outer disk light of evolving spiral galaxies has not previously been
morphologically investigated. Here we report new and very deep near-IR images
of the Triangulum spiral galaxy M33=NGC 598, delineating spectacular arcs of
carbon stars in its outer regions. It is these arcs which dominate the
near-infrared m=2 Fourier spectra of M33. We present near-infrared photometry
with the Hale 5-m reflector, and propose that the arcs are the signature of
accretion of low metallicity gas in the outer disk of M33.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Revised version submitted to A&A Letter
Mid-infrared selection of AGN
Since a large fraction of active galactic nuclei (AGN) is missed in common
UV-excess surveys and is even hard to find in radio, near-IR and X-ray surveys,
we have used a new AGN selection technique which is expected to be not affected
by extinction. Within the scientific verification of the ISOCAM Parallel Survey
at 6.7 micron we have discovered objects with exceptional mid-infrared (MIR)
emission. They are essentially not detected on IRAS-ADDSCANs and only very few
of them show up in the NVSS and FIRST radio surveys. Various colour criteria of
the 6.7 micron data with 2MASS and optical wavebands show that the sources
reach more extreme IR colours than the sources in the Hubble Deep Field-South
and the ELAIS survey. The comparison with known object types suggests that we
have found AGN with a pronounced MIR emission, probably due to circum-nuclear
dust. First results from optical spectroscopy of ten candidates corroborate
this interpretation showing four AGN, two reddened LINER and four extremely
reddened emission-line galaxies with MIR/FIR flux ratios higher than for known
pure starburst galaxies. The results will make a significant contribution to
the debate on the entire AGN population.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication as Letter in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
The alignment of molecular cloud magnetic fields with the spiral arms in M33
The formation of molecular clouds, which serve as stellar nurseries in
galaxies, is poorly understood. A class of cloud formation models suggests that
a large-scale galactic magnetic field is irrelevant at the scale of individual
clouds, because the turbulence and rotation of a cloud may randomize the
orientation of its magnetic field. Alternatively, galactic fields could be
strong enough to impose their direction upon individual clouds, thereby
regulating cloud accumulation and fragmentation, and affecting the rate and
efficiency of star formation. Our location in the disk of the Galaxy makes an
assessment of the situation difficult. Here we report observations of the
magnetic field orientation of six giant molecular cloud complexes in the
nearby, almost face-on, galaxy M33. The fields are aligned with the spiral
arms, suggesting that the large-scale field in M33 anchors the clouds.Comment: to appear in Natur
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