490 research outputs found
Near-Infrared Photometric Variability of Stars Toward the Chamaeleon I Molecular Cloud
We present the results of a J, H, and K_s photometric monitoring campaign of
a 0.72 x 6 sq deg. area centered on the Chamaeleon I star forming region. Data
were obtained on 15 separate nights over a 4 month time interval using the
2MASS South telescope. Out of a total of 34,539 sources brighter than the
photometric completeness limits (J=16.0, H=15.2, K_s=14.8), 95 exhibit
near-infrared variability in one or more bands. The variables can be grouped
into a population of bright, red objects that are associated with the
Chamaeleon I association, and a population of faint, blue variables that are
dispersed over the full 6 deg of the survey and are likely field stars or older
pre-main-sequence stars unrelated to the present-day Chamaeleon I molecular
cloud. Ten new candidate members of Chamaeleon I, including 8 brown dwarf
candidates, have been identified based on variability and/or near-infrared
excess emission in the J-H vs. H-K_s color-color-diagram. We also provide a
compendium of astrometry and J, H, and K_s photometry for previously identified
members and candidate members of Chamaeleon I.Comment: To appear in AJ; see
http://www.astro.caltech.edu/~jmc/variables/cham1
The Two Micron All-Sky Survey: Removing the Infrared Foreground
We introduce the properties of the Two Micron All-Sky Survey (2MASS) survey for IAU Symposium 204. 2MASS is a near-infrared survey of the entire sky characterized by high reliability and completeness. Catalogs and images for 47% of the sky are now available online. This data release has been used by Wright (2000) and Cambr´esy et al. (2000) to subtract the stellar foreground at 1.25 and 2.2 microns from COBE DIRBE data, revealing the cosmological near-infrared background
Three New Cool Brown Dwarfs Discovered with the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) and an Improved Spectrum of the Y0 Dwarf WISE J041022.71+150248.4
As part of a larger search of Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) data
for cool brown dwarfs with effective temperatures less than 1000 K, we present
the discovery of three new cool brown dwarfs with spectral types later than T7.
Using low-resolution, near-infrared spectra obtained with the NASA Infrared
Telescope Facility and the Hubble Space Telescope we derive spectral types of
T9.5 for WISE J094305.98+360723.5, T8 for WISE J200050.19+362950.1, and Y0: for
WISE J220905.73+271143.9. The identification of WISE J220905.73+271143.9 as a Y
dwarf brings the total number of spectroscopically confirmed Y dwarfs to
seventeen. In addition, we present an improved spectrum (i.e. higher
signal-to-noise ratio) of the Y0 dwarf WISE J041022.71+150248.4 that confirms
the Cushing et al. classification of Y0. Spectrophotometric distance estimates
place all three new brown dwarfs at distances less than 12 pc, with WISE
J200050.19+362950.1 lying at a distance of only 3.9-8.0 pc. Finally, we note
that brown dwarfs like WISE J200050.19+362950.1 that lie in or near the
Galactic plane offer an exciting opportunity to measure their mass via
astrometric microlensing.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journa
Dark Matter Constraints from the Sagittarius Dwarf and Tail System
2MASS has provided a three-dimensional map of the >360 degree, wrapped tidal
tails of the Sagittarius (Sgr) dwarf spheroidal galaxy, as traced by M giant
stars. With the inclusion of radial velocity data for stars along these tails,
strong constraints exist for dynamical models of the Milky Way-Sgr interaction.
N-body simulations of Sgr disruption with model parameters spanning a range of
initial conditions (e.g., Sgr mass and orbit, Galactic rotation curve, halo
flattening) are used to find parameterizations that match almost every extant
observational constraint of the Sgr system. We discuss the implications of the
Sgr data and models for the orbit, mass and M/L of the Sgr bound core as well
as the strength, flattening, and lumpiness of the Milky Way potential.Comment: 6 pages, 0 figures. Contribution to proceedings of ``IAU Symposium
220: Dark Matter in Galaxies'', eds. S. Ryder, D.J. Pisano, M. Walker, and K.
Freema
Disentangling the Origin and Heating Mechanism of Supernova Dust: Late-Time Spitzer Spectroscopy of the Type IIn SN 2005ip
This paper presents late-time near-infrared and {\it Spitzer} mid-infrared
photometric and spectroscopic observations of warm dust in the Type IIn SN
2005ip in NGC 2906. The spectra show evidence for two dust components with
different temperatures. Spanning the peak of the thermal emission, these
observations provide strong constraints on the dust mass, temperature, and
luminosity, which serve as critical diagnostics for disentangling the origin
and heating mechanism of each component. The results suggest the warmer dust
has a mass of \msolar, originates from newly formed
dust in the ejecta, or possibly the cool, dense shell, and is continuously
heated by the circumstellar interaction. By contrast, the cooler component
likely originates from a circumstellar shock echo that forms from the heating
of a large, pre-existing dust shell ~\msolar~by the late-time
circumstellar interaction. The progenitor wind velocity derived from the blue
edge of the He 1 1.083 \micron~P Cygni profile indicates a progenitor eruption
likely formed this dust shell 100 years prior to the supernova explosion,
which is consistent with a Luminous Blue Variable (LBV) progenitor star.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, Accepted to Ap
Cosmic Structure Traced by Precision Measurements of the X-Ray Brightest Galaxy Clusters in the Sky
The current status of our efforts to trace cosmic structure with 10^6
galaxies (2MASS), 10^3 galaxy clusters (NORAS II cluster survey), and precision
measurements for 10^2 galaxy clusters (HIFLUGCS) is given. The latter is
illustrated in more detail with results on the gas temperature and metal
abundance structure for 10^0 cluster (A1644) obtained with XMM-Newton.Comment: 4 pages; to be published in the Proceedings of the Conference: The
Emergence of Cosmic Structure, College Park, MD (2002), editors: S.S. Holt
and C. Reynolds; also available at http://www.reiprich.ne
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