88 research outputs found
H-alpha imaging of the Local Volume galaxies I. The NGC 6946 galaxy group
We present new H-alpha imaging of all known dwarf irregular companions to NGC
6946: UGC 11583, KK 251, KK 252, KKR 55, KKR 56, Cepheus 1, KKR 59, and KKR 60.
The galaxies span a range of blue absolute magnitudes of [-13.6, -17.6],
relative gas content of [0.1, 2.5] M_sun/L_sun, current star formation activity
of [0.2, 5.2]10^-2 M_sun yr^-1, and timescale to exhaust the current gas supply
of [6, 86] Gyr.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure. accepted to Research Note in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
Physical Conditions in the Seyfert Galaxy NGC 2992
This paper presents long slit spectral maps of the bi-cone shaped extended
narrow line region (ENLR) in the Seyfert galaxy NGC 2992. We investigate the
physical properties of the ENLR via emission line diagnostics, and compare the
observations to shock and photoionization models for the excitation mechanism
of the gas. The line ratios vary as a function of position in the ENLR, and the
loci of the observed points on line ratio diagrams are shown to be most
consistent with shock+precursor model grids. We consider the energetics of a
nuclear ionizing source for the ENLR, and perform the q-test in which the rate
of ionizing photons from the nucleus is inferred from measurements of the
density and ionization parameter. The q-test is shown to be invalid in the case
of NGC 2992 because of the limitations of the [S II]6717/6731 density
diagnostic. The excitation of the gas is shown to be broadly consistent with
the kinematics, with higher [N II]6583/H-alpha present in the more dynamically
active region. We also show that the pressure associated with the X-ray
emitting plasma may provide a large fraction of the pressure required to power
the ENLR via shocks.Comment: 55 pages, 49 figures, ApJ accepted September 9, 1998. Figures 1a-f
are provided in jpeg forma
Large-Scale Outflows in Edge-on Seyfert Galaxies. I. Optical Emission- Line Imaging and Optical Spectroscopy
We have launched a search for large-scale (\gapprox1 kpc) minor-axis
outflows in edge-on Seyfert galaxies in order to assess their frequency of
occurrence and study their properties. Here we present optical continuum and
\han2 line images and/or minor-axis long-slit spectra of 22 edge-on Seyfert
galaxies. Six of these galaxies show at least one of the following: (i)
bi-symmetric H halos extending along the minor axis, (ii) bright
emission-line complexes at distances \gapprox4 kpc (in projection) out of the
disk, and (iii) double-peaked emission-line profiles from the gas along the
minor-axis, suggesting that a wind-blown bubble is present. Our results
indicate that \gapprox of Seyferts have good evidence for
minor-axis galactic outflows. Kinetic luminosities of the galactic outflows in
our sample Seyferts are 1010 erg~s, assuming all
of the observed minor-axis emission is produced by the outflow. These values
are, in general, 0.1 as large as those for well-studied cases of
superwinds in starburst galaxies (Heckman, Armus \& Miley 1990). However,
far-infrared luminosities of our sample Seyferts are also 0.1 as large.
Both starburst-driven superwinds and wide-angled outflows from the active
galactic nucleus are possible explanations for the observed large-scale
outflows.Comment: 34 pages (text and tables) AASTEX, figures available from
[email protected], ApJ Supp., June 199
Eccentric-disk models for the nucleus of M31
We construct dynamical models of the ``double'' nucleus of M31 in which the
nucleus consists of an eccentric disk of stars orbiting a central black hole.
The principal approximation in these models is that the disk stars travel in a
Kepler potential, i.e., we neglect the mass of the disk relative to the black
hole. We consider both ``aligned'' models, in which the eccentric disk lies in
the plane of the large-scale M31 disk, and ``non-aligned'' models, in which the
orientation of the eccentric disk is fitted to the data. Both types of model
can reproduce the double structure and overall morphology seen in Hubble Space
Telescope photometry. In comparison with the best available ground-based
spectroscopy, the models reproduce the asymmetric rotation curve, the peak
height of the dispersion profile, and the qualitative behavior of the
Gauss-Hermite coefficients h_3 and h_4. Aligned models fail to reproduce the
observation that the surface brightness at P1 is higher than at P2 and yield
significantly poorer fits to the kinematics; thus we favor non-aligned models.
Eccentric-disk models fitted to ground-based spectroscopy are used to predict
the kinematics observed at much higher resolution by the STIS instrument on the
Hubble Space Telescope (Bender et al. 2003), and we find generally satisfactory
agreement.Comment: 45 pages, 18 figures, accepted by Ap
A Radio Study of the Seyfert Galaxy IC 5063: Evidence for Fast Gas Outflow
New radio continuum (8 GHz and 1.4 GHz) and HI 21 cm line observations of the
Seyfert 2 galaxy IC 5063 (PKS 2048-572) were obtained with the Australia
Telescope Compact Array (ATCA). The 8 GHz image reveals a linear triple
structure (~4'', 1.5 kpc) oriented perpendicular to the optical polarization
position angle. It is aligned with the inner dust lane and shows strong
morphological association with the narrow emission line region (NLR). At 21 cm,
very broad (~700 km/s) HI absorption is observed against the strong continuum
source. This absorption is almost entirely blueshifted, indicating a fast net
outflow, but a faint and narrow redshifted component is also present. In IC
5063 we see clear evidence for strong shocks resulting from the radio
plasma-ISM interaction in the central few kpc. However, the energy flux in the
radio plasma is an order of magnitude smaller than the energy emitted in
emission lines. Thus, shocks are unlikely to account solely for the global
ionization of the emission line region, particularly at large distances.
The HI emission outlines a warped disk associated with the system of dust
lanes some ~2' (~38 kpc) in radius. The lack of kinematically disturbed gas
outside the central few kpc, coupled with the disk warp and close morphological
connection of the inner dust lanes and the large-scale ionized gas, support the
idea that the gas at large radii is photoionized by the central region, while
shadowing effects are important in defining its X-shaped morphology. The
kinematics of the ionized and of the neutral gas suggests the existence of a
dark halo.Comment: 18 pages, 8 Postscript figures, 3 jpeg figures, Postscript preprint
is available from http://jhufos.pha.jhu.edu/~zlatan/papers.htm
Towards Spectral Classification of L and T Dwarfs: Infrared and Optical Spectroscopy and Analysis
We present 0.6-2.5um, R~400 spectra of twenty-seven cool, low luminosity
stars and substellar objects. Based on these and previously published spectra
we develop a preliminary spectral classification system for L and T dwarfs. For
late L and T types the classification system is based entirely on four spectral
indices in the 1-2.5um interval. Two of these indices are derived from water
absorption bands at 1.15um and 1.4um, the latter of which shows a smooth
increase in depth through the L and T sequences and can be used to classify
both spectral types. The other two indices make use of methane absorption
features in the H and K bands, with the K band index also applicable to mid to
late L dwarfs. Continuum indices shortward of 1um used by previous authors to
classify L dwarfs are found to be useful only through mid L subclasses. We
employ the 1.5um water index and the 2.2um methane index to complete the L
classification through L9.5 and to link the new system with a modified version
of the 2MASS ``Color-d'' index. By correlating the depths of the methane and
water absorption features, we establish a T spectral sequence from types T0 to
T8, based on all four indices, which is a smooth continuation of the L
sequence. We reclassify two 2MASS L8 dwarfs as L9 and L9.5 and identify one
SDSS object as L9. In the proposed system methane absorption appears in the K
band approximately at L8, two subclasses earlier than its appearance in the H
band. The L and T spectral classes are distinguished by the absence and
presence, respectively, of H band methane absorption.Comment: 40 pages, 14 figures, to be published in Ap.J., Jan 1, 200
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