838 research outputs found
Jet-related Excitation of the [CII] Emission in the Active Galaxy NGC 4258 with SOFIA
We detect widespread [CII]157.7um emission from the inner 5 kpc of the active
galaxy NGC 4258 with the SOFIA integral field spectrometer FIFI-LS. The
emission is found associated with warm H2, distributed along and beyond the end
of southern jet, in a zone known to contain shock-excited optical filaments. It
is also associated with soft X-ray hot-spots, which are the counterparts of the
`anomalous radio arms' of NGC~4258, and a 1 kpc-long filament on the minor axis
of the galaxy which contains young star clusters. Palomar-CWI H-alpha integral
field spectroscopy shows that the filament exhibits non-circular motions within
NGC 4258. Many of the [CII] profiles are very broad, with the highest line
width, 455 km/s, observed at the position of the southern jet bow-shock.
Abnormally high ratios of L([CII])/L(FIR) and L([CII])/L(PAH7.7um) are found
along and beyond the southern jet and in the X-ray hotspots. These are the same
regions that exhibit unusually large intrinsic [CII] line widths. This suggests
that the [CII] traces warm molecular gas in shocks and turbulence associated
with the jet. We estimate that as much as 40% (3.8 x 10^39 erg/s) of the total
[CII] luminosity from the inner 5 kpc of NGC 4258 arises in shocks and
turbulence (< 1% bolometric luminosity from the active nucleus), the rest being
consistent with [CII] excitation associated with star formation. We propose
that the highly-inclined jet is colliding with, and being deflected around,
dense irregularities in a thick disk, leading to significant energy dissipation
over a wide area of the galaxy.Comment: Accepted for Publication in the Astrophysical Journal Oct 29 201
ALMA Maps of Dust and Warm Dense Gas Emission in the Starburst Galaxy IC 5179
We present our high-resolution
(, 34 pc) observations of
the CO(6-5) line emission, which probes the warm and dense molecular gas, and
the 434 m dust continuum emission in the nuclear region of the starburst
galaxy IC 5179, conducted with the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA). The
CO(6-5) emission is spatially distributed in filamentary structures with many
dense cores and shows a velocity field that is characteristic of a
circum-nuclear rotating gas disk, with 90% of the rotation speed arising within
a radius of pc. At the scale of our spatial resolution, the
CO(6-5) and dust emission peaks do not always coincide, with their surface
brightness ratio varying by a factor of 10. This result suggests that
their excitation mechanisms are likely different, as further evidenced by the
Southwest to Northeast spatial gradient of both CO-to-dust continuum ratio and
Pa- equivalent width. Within the nuclear region (radius300 pc)
and with a resolution of 34 pc, the CO line flux (dust flux density)
detected in our ALMA observations is Jy km/s ( mJy), which
account for 22% (2.4%) of the total value measured by Herschel.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Understanding the 8 micron vs. Pa-alpha relationship on sub-arcsecond scales in Luminous Infrared Galaxies
This work explores in detail the relation between the 8 micron and the
Pa-alpha emissions for 122 HII regions identified in a sample of 10 low-z LIRGs
with nearly constant metallicity (12 + log (O/H) ~ 8.8). We use Gemini/T-ReCS
high-spatial resolution (<~ 0.4" ~ 120 pc for the average distance of 60 Mpc of
our sample) mid-infrared imaging (at 8.7 micron or 10.3 micron) together with
HST/NICMOS continuum and Pa-alpha images. The LIRG HII regions extend the
L_8micron vs. L_Pa-alpha relation found for HII knots in the high-metallicity
SINGS galaxies by about two orders of magnitude to higher luminosities. Since
the metallicity of the LIRG sample is nearly constant, we can rule out this
effect as a cause for the scatter seen in the relationship. In turn, it is
attributed to two effects: age and PAH features. The L_8micron/L_Pa-alpha
ratio, which varies by a factor of ten for the LIRG HII regions, is reproduced
by a model with instantaneous star formation and ages ranging from ~ 4 to 7.5
Myr. The remaining dispersion around the model predictions for a given age is
probably due to differential contributions of the PAH features (the 8.6 micron,
in our case) to the 8 micron emission from galaxy to galaxy.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ; paper with
full-resolution figures can be found at:
http://damir.iem.csic.es/extragalactic
Star-formation histories of local luminous infrared galaxies
We present the analysis of the integrated spectral energy distribution (SED)
from the ultraviolet (UV) to the far-infrared and H of a sample of 29
local systems and individual galaxies with infrared (IR) luminosities between
10^11 Lsun and 10^11.8 Lsun. We have combined new narrow-band H+[NII]
and broad-band g, r optical imaging taken with the Nordic Optical Telescope
(NOT), with archival GALEX, 2MASS, Spitzer, and Herschel data. The SEDs
(photometry and integrated H flux) have been fitted with a modified
version of the MAGPHYS code using stellar population synthesis models for the
UV-near-IR range and thermal emission models for the IR emission taking into
account the energy balance between the absorbed and re-emitted radiation. From
the SED fits we derive the star-formation histories (SFH) of these galaxies.
For nearly half of them the star-formation rate appears to be approximately
constant during the last few Gyrs. In the other half, the current
star-formation rate seems to be enhanced by a factor of 3-20 with respect to
that occured ~1 Gyr ago. Objects with constant SFH tend to be more massive than
starbursts and they are compatible with the expected properties of a
main-sequence (M-S) galaxy. Likewise, the derived SFHs show that all our
objects were M-S galaxies ~1 Gyr ago with stellar masses between 10^10.1 and
10^11.5 Msun. We also derived from our fits the average extinction (A_v=0.6-3
mag) and the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) luminosity to L(IR) ratio
(0.03-0.16). We combined the A_v with the total IR and H luminosities
into a diagram which can be used to identify objects with rapidly changing
(increasing or decreasing) SFR during the last 100 Myr.Comment: 16 pages + online material, accepted for publication in A&
Resolving the AGN and host emission in the mid-infrared using a model-independent spectral decomposition
We present results on the spectral decomposition of 118 Spitzer Infrared
Spectrograph (IRS) spectra from local active galactic nuclei (AGN) using a
large set of Spitzer/IRS spectra as templates. The templates are themselves IRS
spectra from extreme cases where a single physical component (stellar,
interstellar, or AGN) completely dominates the integrated mid-infrared
emission. We show that a linear combination of one template for each physical
component reproduces the observed IRS spectra of AGN hosts with unprecedented
fidelity for a template fitting method, with no need to model extinction
separately. We use full probability distribution functions to estimate
expectation values and uncertainties for observables, and find that the
decomposition results are robust against degeneracies. Furthermore, we compare
the AGN spectra derived from the spectral decomposition with sub-arcsecond
resolution nuclear photometry and spectroscopy from ground-based observations.
We find that the AGN component derived from the decomposition closely matches
the nuclear spectrum, with a 1-sigma dispersion of 0.12 dex in luminosity and
typical uncertainties of ~0.19 in the spectral index and ~0.1 in the silicate
strength. We conclude that the emission from the host galaxy can be reliably
removed from the IRS spectra of AGN. This allows for unbiased studies of the
AGN emission in intermediate and high redshift galaxies -currently inaccesible
to ground-based observations- with archival Spitzer/IRS data and in the future
with the Mid-InfraRed Instrument of the James Webb Space Telescope. The
decomposition code and templates are available at
http://www.denebola.org/ahc/deblendIRS.Comment: 16 pages, 15 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication in Ap
The FUV to Near-IR Morphologies of Luminous Infrared Galaxies in the GOALS Sample
We compare the morphologies of a sample of 20 LIRGs from the Great
Observatories All-sky LIRG Survey (GOALS) in the FUV, B, I and H bands, using
the Gini (G) and M20 parameters to quantitatively estimate the distribution and
concentration of flux as a function of wavelength. HST images provide an
average spatial resolution of ~80 pc. While our LIRGs can be reliably
classified as mergers across the entire range of wavelengths studied here,
there is a clear shift toward more negative M20 (more bulge-dominated) and a
less significant decrease in G values at longer wavelengths. We find no
correlation between the derived FUV G-M20 parameters and the global measures of
the IR to FUV flux ratio, IRX. Given the fine resolution in our HST data, this
suggests either that the UV morphology and IRX are correlated on very small
scales, or that the regions emitting the bulk of the IR emission emit almost no
FUV light. We use our multi-wavelength data to simulate how merging LIRGs would
appear from z~0.5-3 in deep optical and near-infrared images such as the HUDF,
and use these simulations to measure the G-M20 at these redshifts. Our
simulations indicate a noticeable decrease in G, which flattens at z >= 2 by as
much as 40%, resulting in mis-classifying our LIRGs as disk-like, even in the
rest-frame FUV. The higher redshift values of M20 for the GOALS sources do not
appear to change more than about 10% from the values at z~0. The change in
G-M20 is caused by the surface brightness dimming of extended tidal features
and asymmetries, and also the decreased spatial resolution which reduced the
number of individual clumps identified. This effect, seen as early as z~0.5,
could easily lead to an underestimate of the number of merging galaxies at
high-redshift in the rest-frame FUV.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journal. The total page
count is 15 pages with 13 figures and 1 Tabl
The Spatial Extent of (U)LIRGs in the Mid-Infrared. II. Feature Emission
We present results from the second part of our analysis of the extended
mid-infrared (MIR) emission of the Great Observatories All-Sky LIRG Survey
(GOALS) sample based on 5-14 micron low-resolution spectra obtained with the
IRS on Spitzer. We calculate the fraction of extended emission as a function of
wavelength for all galaxies in the sample, FEE_lambda, and spatially separate
the MIR spectrum of galaxies into their nuclear and extended components.
We find that the [NeII] emission line is as compact as the hot dust MIR
continuum, while the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) emission is more
extended. The 6.2 and 7.7 micron PAH emission is more compact than that of the
11.3 micron PAH, which is consistent with the formers being enhanced in a more
ionized medium. The presence of an AGN or a powerful nuclear starburst
increases the compactness of the hot dust MIR continuum, but has a negligible
effect on the spatial extent of the PAH emission on kpc-scales. Globally, the
spectra of the extended emission component are homogeneous for all galaxies in
GOALS. This suggests that the physical properties of star formation taking
place at distances farther than 1.5 kpc from the nuclei of (U)LIRGs are very
similar, resembling local star-forming galaxies with L_IR < 10^11 Lsun, as well
as star formation-dominated ULIRGs at z~2. In contrast, the MIR spectra of the
nuclear component of local (U)LIRGs are very diverse. This implies that the
observed variety of their integrated MIR properties arise, on average, only
from the processes that are taking place in their cores.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
ALMA Observation of NGC5135: The Circumnuclear CO(6-5) and Dust Continuum Emission at 45 Parsec Resolution[]
We present high-resolution (0.17\arcsec 0.14\arcsec) Atacama Large
Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) observations of the CO\,(6-5) line, and
435\um\ dust continuum emission within a 9\arcsec 9\arcsec\ area
centered on the nucleus of the galaxy NGC\,5135. NGC\,5135 is a well-studied
luminous infrared galaxy that also harbors a Compton-thick active galactic
nucleus (AGN). At the achieved resolution of 48 40\,pc, the CO\,(6-5)
and dust emissions are resolved into gas "clumps" along the symmetrical dust
lanes associated with the inner stellar bar. The clumps have radii between
45-180\,pc and CO\,(6-5) line widths of 60-88\,\kms. The CO\,(6-5)
to dust continuum flux ratios vary among the clumps and show an increasing
trend with the \FeII/Br- ratios, which we interpret as evidence for
supernova-driven shocked gas providing a significant contribution to the \co65\
emission. The central AGN is undetected in continuum, nor in CO\,(6-5) if its
line velocity width is no less than \,40\,\kms. We estimate that the AGN
contributes at most 1\% of the integrated CO\,(6-5) flux of 512
24Jy\kms\ within the ALMA field of view, which in turn accounts for
32\% of the CO\,(6-5) flux of the whole galaxy.Comment: 21 pages, 12 figures, Accepted for publication in Ap
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