1,251 research outputs found
Galaxy interactions and strength of nuclear activity
Analysis of data in the literature for differential velocities and projected separations of nearby Seyfert galaxies with possible companions shows a clear difference in projected separations between type 1's and type 2's. This kinematic difference between the two activity classes reinforces other independent evidence that their different nuclear characteristics are related to a non-nuclear physical distinction between the two classes. The differential velocities and projected separations of the galaxy pairs in this sample yield mean galaxy masses, sizes, and mass to light ratios which are consistent with those found by the statistical methods of Karachentsev. Although the galaxy sample discussed here is too small and too poorly defined to provide robust support for these conclusions, the results strongly suggest that nuclear activity in Seyfert galaxies is associated with gravitational perturbations from companion galaxies, and that there are physical distinctions between the host companions of Seyfert 1 and Seyfert 2 nuclei which may depend both on the environment and the structure of the host galaxy itself
Monodromy-data parameterization of spaces of local solutions of integrable reductions of Einstein's field equations
For the fields depending on two of the four space-time coordinates only, the
spaces of local solutions of various integrable reductions of Einstein's field
equations are shown to be the subspaces of the spaces of local solutions of the
``null-curvature'' equations constricted by a requirement of a universal (i.e.
solution independent) structures of the canonical Jordan forms of the unknown
matrix variables. These spaces of solutions of the ``null-curvature'' equations
can be parametrized by a finite sets of free functional parameters -- arbitrary
holomorphic (in some local domains) functions of the spectral parameter which
can be interpreted as the monodromy data on the spectral plane of the
fundamental solutions of associated linear systems. Direct and inverse problems
of such mapping (``monodromy transform''), i.e. the problem of finding of the
monodromy data for any local solution of the ``null-curvature'' equations with
given canonical forms, as well as the existence and uniqueness of such solution
for arbitrarily chosen monodromy data are shown to be solvable unambiguously.
The linear singular integral equations solving the inverse problems and the
explicit forms of the monodromy data corresponding to the spaces of solutions
of the symmetry reduced Einstein's field equations are derived.Comment: LaTeX, 33 pages, 1 figure. Typos, language and reference correction
MERLIN imaging of the maser flare in Markarian 348
MERLIN images of Mrk 348 at 22 GHz show water maser emission at 0.02 - 0.11
Jy, within approximately 0.8 pc of the nucleus. This is the first direct
confirmation that molecular material exists close to the Seyfert 2 nucleus. Mrk
348 was observed in 2000 May one month after Falcke et al. (2000) first
identified the maser in single-dish spectra. The peak maser flux density has
increased about threefold. The masing region is < 0.6 pc in radius. The flux
density of radio continuum emission from the core has been rising for about 2
years. The maser-core separation is barely resolved but at the 3 sigma
significance level they are not coincident along the line of sight. The masers
lie in the direction of the northern radio lobes and probably emanate from
material shocked by a jet with velocity close to c. The correlation between the
radio continuum increase and maser flare is explained as arising from high
level nuclear activity through a common excitation mechanism although direct
maser amplification of the core by masers tracing a Keplerian disc is not
completely ruled out.Comment: Accepted by MNRAS Letters, 5 pages, 3 figures, corrections in text
and figur
Dynamical Masses in Luminous Infrared Galaxies
We have studied the dynamics and masses of a sample of ten nearby luminous
and ultraluminous infrared galaxies (LIRGS and ULIRGs), using 2.3 micron CO
absorption line spectroscopy and near-infrared H- and Ks-band imaging. By
combining velocity dispersions derived from the spectroscopy, disk
scale-lengths obtained from the imaging, and a set of likely model density
profiles, we calculate dynamical masses for each LIRG. For the majority of the
sample, it is difficult to reconcile our mass estimates with the large amounts
of gas derived from millimeter observations and from a standard conversion
between CO emission and H_2 mass. Our results imply that LIRGs do not have huge
amounts of molecular gas (10^10-10^11 Msolar) at their centers, and support
previous indications that the standard conversion of CO to H_2 probably
overestimates the gas masses and cannot be used in these environments. This in
turn suggests much more modest levels of extinction in the near-infrared for
LIRGs than previously predicted (A_V~10-20 versus A_V~100-1000). The lower gas
mass estimates indicated by our observations imply that the star formation
efficiency in these systems is very high and is triggered by cloud-cloud
collisions, shocks, and winds rather than by gravitational instabilities in
circumnuclear gas disks.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figures, accepted to Ap
Velocities from Cross-Correlation: A Guide for Self-Improvement
The measurement of Doppler velocity shifts in spectra is a ubiquitous theme
in astronomy, usually handled by computing the cross-correlation of the
signals, and finding the location of its maximum. This paper addresses the
problem of the determination of wavelength or velocity shifts among multiple
spectra of the same, or very similar, objects. We implement the classical
cross-correlation method and experiment with several simple models to determine
the location of the maximum of the cross-correlation function. We propose a new
technique, 'self-improvement', to refine the derived solutions by requiring
that the relative velocity for any given pair of spectra is consistent with all
others. By exploiting all available information, spectroscopic surveys
involving large numbers of similar objects may improve their precision
significantly. As an example, we simulate the analysis of a survey of G-type
stars with the SDSS instrumentation. Applying 'self-improvement' refines
relative radial velocities by more than 50% at low signal-to-noise ratio. The
concept is equally applicable to the problem of combining a series of
spectroscopic observations of the same object, each with a different Doppler
velocity or instrument-related offset, into a single spectrum with an enhanced
signal-to-noise ratio.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, uses emulateapj.cls; to appear in the
Astronomical Journal; see http://hebe.as.utexas.edu/stools/ to obtain the
companion softwar
Log-Networks
We introduce a growing network model in which a new node attaches to a
randomly-selected node, as well as to all ancestors of the target node. This
mechanism produces a sparse, ultra-small network where the average node degree
grows logarithmically with network size while the network diameter equals 2. We
determine basic geometrical network properties, such as the size dependence of
the number of links and the in- and out-degree distributions. We also compare
our predictions with real networks where the node degree also grows slowly with
time -- the Internet and the citation network of all Physical Review papers.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, 2-column revtex4 format. Version 2: minor changes
in response to referee comments and to another proofreading; final version
for PR
Extended Emission Line Gas in Radio Galaxies - PKS0349-27
PKS0349-27 is a classical FRII radio galaxy with an AGN host which has a
spectacular, spiral-like structure in its extended emission line gas (EELG). We
have measured the velocity field in this gas and find that it splits into 2
cloud groups separated by radial velocities which at some points approach 400
km/s Measurements of the diagnostic emission line ratios [OIII]5007/H-beta,
[SII]6716+6731/H-alpha, and [NII]6583/H-alpha in these clouds show no evidence
for the type of HII region emission associated with starburst activity in
either velocity system. The measured emission line ratios are similar to those
found in the nuclei of narrow-line radio galaxies, but the extended
ionization/excitation cannot be produced by continuum emission from the active
nucleus alone. We present arguments which suggest that the velocity
disturbances seen in the EELG are most likely the result of a galaxy-galaxy
collision or merger but cannot completely rule out the possibility that the gas
has been disrupted by the passage of a radio jet.Comment: 12 pages, 3 fig pages, to appear in the Astrophys.
Simulation study of magnetic holes at the Earth's collisionless bow shock
Recent observations by the Cluster and Double Star spacecraft at the Earth's bow shock have revealed localized magnetic field and density holes in the solar wind plasma. These structures are characterized by a local depletion of the magnetic field and the plasma density, and by a strong increase of the plasma temperature inside the magnetic and density cavities. Our objective here is to report results of a hybrid-Vlasov simulations of ion-Larmor-radius sized plasma density cavities with parameters that are representative of the high-beta solar wind plasma at the Earth's bow shock. We observe the asymmetric self-steepening and shock-formation of the cavity, and a strong localized temperature increase (by a factor of 5–7) of the plasma due to reflections and shock surfing of the ions against the collisionless shock. Temperature maxima are correlated with density minima, in agreement with Cluster observations. For oblique incidence of the solar wind, we observe efficient acceleration of ions along the magnetic field lines by the shock drift acceleration process
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