7,747 research outputs found
Binary Galaxies in the Local Supercluster and Its Neighborhood
We report a catalog of 509 pairs identified among 10403 nearby galaxies with
line-of-sight velocities V_LG < 3500 km/s.We selected binary systems in
accordance with two criteria (bounding and temporal), which require the
physical pair of galaxies to have negative total energy and its components to
be located inside the zero-velocity surface. We assume that individual galaxy
masses are proportional to their total K-band luminosities, M = L_K x 6M/L. The
catalog gives the magnitudes and morphological types of galaxies and also the
projected (orbital) masses and pair isolation indices. The component
line-of-sight velocity differences and projected distances of the binary
systems considered have power-law distributions with the median values of 35
km/s and 123 kpc, respectively. The median mass-to-K-band luminosity ratio is
equal to 11 M/L, and its uncertainty is mostly due to the errors of measured
velocities. Our sample of binary systems has a typical density contrast of d
ro/ro_c ~ 500 and a median crossing time of about 3.5 Gyr. We point out the
substantial fraction of binary systems consisting of late-type dwarf galaxies,
where the luminosities of both components are lower than that of the Small
Magellanic Cloud. The median projected distance for 41 such pairs is only 30
kpc, and the median difference of their line-of-sight velocities is equal to 14
km/s which is smaller than the typical error for radial-velocity (30 km/s).
This specific population of gas-rich dwarf binary galaxies such as I Zw 18 may
be at the stage immediately before merging of its components. Such objects,
which are usually lost in flux-limited (and not distance-limited) samples
deserve a thorough study in the HI radio line with high spatial and velocity
resolution.Comment: published in Astrophysical Bulletin, 2008, Vol. 63, No. 4, pp.
299-34
Dynamics of Void and its Shape in Redshift Space
We investigate the dynamics of a single spherical void embedded in a
Friedmann-Lema\^itre universe, and analyze the void shape in the redshift
space. We find that the void in the redshift space appears as an ellipse shape
elongated in the direction of the line of sight (i.e., an opposite deformation
to the Kaiser effect). Applying this result to observed void candidates at the
redshift z~1-2, it may provide us with a new method to evaluate the
cosmological parameters, in particular the value of a cosmological constant.Comment: 19 pages, 11 figure
Breaking the Disk/Halo Degeneracy with Gravitational Lensing
The degeneracy between the disk and the dark matter contribution to galaxy
rotation curves remains an important uncertainty in our understanding of disk
galaxies. Here we discuss a new method for breaking this degeneracy using
gravitational lensing by spiral galaxies, and apply this method to the spiral
lens B1600+434 as an example. The combined image and lens photometry
constraints allow models for B1600+434 with either a nearly singular dark
matter halo, or a halo with a sizable core. A maximum disk model is ruled out
with high confidence. Further information, such as the circular velocity of
this galaxy, will help break the degeneracies. Future studies of spiral galaxy
lenses will be able to determine the relative contribution of disk, bulge, and
halo to the mass in the inner parts of galaxies.Comment: Replaced with minor revisions, a typo fixed, and reference added; 21
pages, 8 figures, ApJ accepte
Looking the void in the eyes - the kSZ effect in LTB models
As an alternative explanation of the dimming of distant supernovae it has
recently been advocated that we live in a special place in the Universe near
the centre of a large void described by a Lemaitre-Tolman-Bondi (LTB) metric.
The Universe is no longer homogeneous and isotropic and the apparent late time
acceleration is actually a consequence of spatial gradients in the metric. If
we did not live close to the centre of the void, we would have observed a
Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) dipole much larger than that allowed by
observations. Hence, until now it has been argued, for the model to be
consistent with observations, that by coincidence we happen to live very close
to the centre of the void or we are moving towards it. However, even if we are
at the centre of the void, we can observe distant galaxy clusters, which are
off-centre. In their frame of reference there should be a large CMB dipole,
which manifests itself observationally for us as a kinematic Sunyaev-Zeldovich
(kSZ) effect. kSZ observations give far stronger constraints on the LTB model
compared to other observational probes such as Type Ia Supernovae, the CMB, and
baryon acoustic oscillations. We show that current observations of only 9
clusters with large error bars already rule out LTB models with void sizes
greater than approximately 1.5 Gpc and a significant underdensity, and that
near future kSZ surveys like the Atacama Cosmology Telescope, South Pole
Telescope, APEX telescope, or the Planck satellite will be able to strongly
rule out or confirm LTB models with giga parsec sized voids. On the other hand,
if the LTB model is confirmed by observations, a kSZ survey gives a unique
possibility of directly reconstructing the expansion rate and underdensity
profile of the void.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures, submitted to JCA
Bilepton contributions to the neutrinoless double beta decay in the economical 3-3-1 model
Possible contributions of the bilepton to the neutrinoless double beta
decay in the economical 3-3-1 model are discussed. We
show that the decay in this model is due to both
sources--Majorana and Dirac neutrino masses. If
the mixing angle between charged gauge bosons, the standard model and
bilepton , is in range of the ratio of neutrino masses , both the Majorana and Dirac masses simultaneously give
contributions dominant to the decay. As results, constraints on the bilepton
mass are also given.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
A List of Galaxies for Gravitational Wave Searches
We present a list of galaxies within 100 Mpc, which we call the Gravitational
Wave Galaxy Catalogue (GWGC), that is currently being used in follow-up
searches of electromagnetic counterparts from gravitational wave searches. Due
to the time constraints of rapid follow-up, a locally available catalogue of
reduced, homogenized data is required. To achieve this we used four existing
catalogues: an updated version of the Tully Nearby Galaxy Catalog, the Catalog
of Neighboring Galaxies, the V8k catalogue and HyperLEDA. The GWGC contains
information on sky position, distance, blue magnitude, major and minor
diameters, position angle, and galaxy type for 53,255 galaxies. Errors on these
quantities are either taken directly from the literature or estimated based on
our understanding of the uncertainties associated with the measurement method.
By using the PGC numbering system developed for HyperLEDA, the catalogue has a
reduced level of degeneracies compared to catalogues with a similar purpose and
is easily updated. We also include 150 Milky Way globular clusters. Finally, we
compare the GWGC to previously used catalogues, and find the GWGC to be more
complete within 100 Mpc due to our use of more up-to-date input catalogues and
the fact that we have not made a blue luminosity cut.Comment: Accepted for publication in Classical and Quantum Gravity, 13 pages,
7 figure
The Tully-Fisher Relation and H_not
The use of the Tully-Fisher (TF) relation for the determination of the Hubble
Constant relies on the availability of an adequate template TF relation and of
reliable primary distances. Here we use a TF template relation with the best
available kinematical zero-point, obtained from a sample of 24 clusters of
galaxies extending to cz ~ 9,000 km/s, and the most recent set of Cepheid
distances for galaxies fit for TF use. The combination of these two ingredients
yields H_not = 69+/-5 km/(s Mpc). The approach is significantly more accurate
than the more common application with single cluster (e.g. Virgo, Coma)
samples.Comment: 10 pages, including 2 figures and 1 table; uses AAS LaTex. Submitted
to ApJ Letter
The Bulk Motion of Flat Edge-On Galaxies Based on 2MASS Photometry
We report the results of applying the 2MASS Tully-Fisher (TF) relations to
study the galaxy bulk flows. For 1141 all-sky distributed flat RFGC galaxies we
construct J, H, K_s TF relations and find that Kron magnitudes show
the smallest dispersion on the TF diagram. For the sample of 971 RFGC galaxies
with V_{3K} < 18000 km/s we find a dispersion and an
amplitude of bulk flow V= 199 +/-61 km/s, directed towards l=301 degr +/-18
degr, b=-2 degr +/-15 degr. Our determination of low-amplitude coherent flow is
in good agreement with a set of recent data derived from EFAR, PSCz, SCI/SCII
samples. The resultant two- dimensional smoothed peculiar velocity field traces
well the large-scale density variations in the galaxy distributions. The
regions of large positive peculiar velocities lie in the direction of the Great
Attractor and Shapley concentration. A significant negative peculiar velocity
is seen in the direction of Bootes and in the direction of the Local void. A
small positive peculiar velocity (100 -- 150 km/s) is seen towards the
Pisces-Perseus supercluster, as well as the Hercules - Coma - Corona Borealis
supercluster regions.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures. A&A/2003/3582 accepted 15.05.200
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