45,185 research outputs found
A measurement of the transverse velocity of Q2237+0305
Determination of microlensing parameters in the gravitationally lensed quasar
Q2237+0305 from the statistics of high magnification events will require
monitoring for more than 100 years (Wambsganss, Paczynski & Schneider 1990).
However we show that the effective transverse velocity of the lensing galaxy
can be determined on a more realistic time-scale through consideration of the
distribution of light-curve derivatives. The 10 years of existing monitoring
data for Q2237+0305 are analysed. These data display strong evidence for
microlensing that is not associated with a high magnification event. An upper
limit of v < 500 km/sec is obtained for the galactic transverse velocity which
is smaller than previously assumed values. The analysis suggests that the
observed microlensing variation may be predominantly due to stellar proper
motions. The statistical significance of the results obtained from our method
will be increased by the addition of data points from current and future
monitoring campaigns. However reduced photometric errors will be more valuable
than an increased sampling rate.Comment: 16 pages, including 17 figures. Accepted for publication in M.N.R.A.
Interpretation of the OGLE Q2237+0305 microlensing light-curve
The four bright images of the gravitationally lensed quasar Q2237+0305 are
being monitored from the ground (eg. OGLE collaboration, Apache Point
Observatory) in the hope of observing a high magnification event (HME). Over
the past three seasons (1997-1999) the OGLE collaboration has produced
microlensing light-curves with unprecedented coverage. These demonstrate
smooth, independent (therefore microlensing) variability between the images
(Wozniak et al. 2000a,b; OGLE web page). We have retrospectively compared
probability functions for high-magnification event parameters with several
observed light-curve features. We conclude that the 1999 image C peak was due
to the source having passed outside of a cusp rather than to a caustic
crossing. In addition, we find that the image C light-curve shows evidence for
a caustic crossing between the 1997 and 1998 observing seasons involving the
appearance of new critical images. Our models predict that the next image C
event is most likely to arrive 500 days following the 1999 peak, but with a
large uncertainty (100-2000 days). Finally, given the image A light-curve
derivative at the end of the 1999 observing season, our modelling suggests that
a caustic crossing will occur between the 1999 and 2000 observing seasons,
implying a minimum for the image A light-curve ~1-1.5 magnitudes fainter than
the November 1999 level.Comment: 11 pages, 15 figures. Accepted for publication in M.N.R.A.
Limits on the microlens mass function of Q2237+0305
Gravitational microlensing at cosmological distances is potentially a
powerful tool for probing the mass functions of stars and compact objects in
other galaxies. In the case of multiply-imaged quasars, microlensing data has
been used to determine the average microlens mass. However the measurements
have relied on an assumed transverse velocity for the lensing galaxy. Since the
measured mass scales with the square of the transverse velocity, published mass
limits are quite uncertain. In the case of Q2237+0305 we have properly
constrained this uncertainty. The distribution of light curve derivatives
allows quantitative treatment of the relative rates of microlensing due to
proper motions of microlenses, the orbital stream motion of microlenses and the
bulk galactic transverse velocity. By demanding that the microlensing rate due
to the motions of microlenses is the minimum that should be observed we
determine lower limits for the average mass of stars and compact objects in the
bulge of Q2237+0305. If microlenses are assumed to move in an orbital stream
the lower limit ranges between 0.005 and 0.023 solar masses where the the
systematic dependence is due to the fraction of smooth matter and the size of
photometric error assumed for published monitoring data. However, if the
microlenses are assumed to move according to an isotropic velocity dispersion
then a larger lower limit of 0.019-0.11 solar masses is obtained. A significant
contribution of Jupiter mass compact objects to the mass distribution of the
galactic bulge of Q2237+0305 is therefore unambiguously ruled out.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of
the Royal Astronomical Society. New version has improved presentatio
Cyanoacetylene in IC 342: An Evolving Dense Gas Component with Starburst Age
We present the first images of the J=5-4 and J=16-15 lines of the dense gas
tracer, cyanoacetylene, HC_3N, in an external galaxy. The central 200 pc of the
nearby star-forming spiral galaxy, IC 342, was mapped using the VLA and the
Plateau de Bure Interferometer. HC_3N(5-4) line emission is found across the
nuclear mini-spiral, but is very weak towards the starburst site, the location
of the strongest mid-IR and radio emission. The J=16-15 and 10-9 lines are also
faint near the large HII region complex, but are brighter relative to the 5-4
line, consistent with higher excitation. The brightest HC_3N emission is
located in the northern arm of the nuclear minispiral, 100 pc away from the
radio/IR source to the southwest of the nucleus. This location appears less
affected by ultraviolet radiation, and may represent a more embedded, earlier
stage of star formation. HC_3N excitation temperatures are consistent with
those determined from C^{18}O; the gas is dense, 10^{4-5}/cc, and cool, T_K ~<
40 K. So as to not violate limits on the total H_2 mass determined from
C^{18}O, at least two dense components are required to model IC 342's giant
molecular clouds. These observations suggest that HC_3N(5-4) is an excellent
probe of the dense, quiescent gas in galaxies. The high excitation combined
with faint emission towards the dense molecular gas at the starburst indicates
that it currently lacks large masses of very dense gas. We propose a scenario
where the starburst is being caught in the act of dispersing or destroying its
dense gas in the presence of the large HII region. This explains the high star
formation efficiency seen in the dense component. The little remaining dense
gas appears to be in pressure equilibrium with the starburst HII region.Comment: Accepted, AJ. 12 pages, 5 figure
Dense Molecular Filaments Feeding a Starburst: ALMA Maps of CO(3-2) in Henize 2-10
We present ALMA CO(3-2) observations at 0.3 arcsec resolution of He2-10, a
starburst dwarf galaxy and possible high-z galaxy analogue. The warm dense gas
traced by CO(3--2) is found in clumpy filaments that are kinematically and
spatially distinct. The filaments have no preferred orientation or direction;
this may indicate that the galaxy is not evolving into a disk galaxy. Filaments
appear to be feeding the active starburst; the velocity field in one filament
suggests acceleration onto an embedded star cluster. The relative strengths of
CO(3-2) and radio continuum vary strongly on decaparsec scales in the
starburst. There is no CO(3--2) clump coincident with the non-thermal radio
source that has been suggested to be an AGN, nor unusual kinematics.
The kinematics of the molecular gas show significant activity apparently
unrelated to the current starburst. The longest filament, east of the
starburst, has a pronounced shear of FWHM ~\kms\ across its 50~pc
width over its entire kpc length. The cause of the shear is not
clear. This filament is close in projection to a `dynamically distinct' CO
feature previously seen in CO(1--0). The most complex region and the most
highly disturbed gas velocities are in a region 200~pc south of the starburst.
The CO(3--2) emission there reveals a molecular outflow, of linewidth FWZI
120-140 \kms, requiring an energy . There is
at present {\it no} candidate for the driving source of this outflow.Comment: This was revised 31 October to correct some typos and to replace
Figure
A Machian Model of Dark Energy
Einstein believed that Mach's principle should play a major role in finding a
meaningful spacetime geometry, though it was discovered later that his field
equations gave some solutions which were not Machian. It is shown, in this
essay, that the kinematical models, which are invoked to solve the
cosmological constant problem, are in fact consistent with Mach's ideas. One
particular model in this category is described which results from the
microstructure of spacetime and seems to explain the current observations
successfully and also has some benefits over the conventional models. This
forces one to think whether the Mach's ideas and the cosmological constant are
interrelated in some way.Comment: Received an Honorable mention in the Essay Contest-2002 sponsored by
the Gravity Research Foundation; A paragraph added on how the model can
explain the CMB anisotropy observations; To appear in the Classical and
Quantum Gravit
Scalar Field as Dark Matter in the Universe
We investigate the hypothesis that the scalar field is the dark matter and
the dark energy in the Cosmos, wich comprises about 95% of the matter of the
Universe. We show that this hypothesis explains quite well the recent
observations on type Ia supernovae.Comment: 4 pages REVTeX, 1 eps figure. Minor changes. To appear in Classical
and Quantum Gravit
Predicting caustic crossing high magnification events in Q2237+0305
The central regions of the gravitationally lensed quasar Q2237+0305 can be
indirectly resolved on nano-arcsecond scales if viewed spectrophotometricly
during a microlensing high magnification event (HME). Q2237+0305 is currently
being monitored from the ground (eg. OGLE collaboration, Apache Point
Observatory), with the goal, among others, of triggering ground and spacecraft
based target of opportunity (TOO) observations of an HME. In this work we
investigate the rate of change (trigger) in image brightness that signals an
imminent HME and importantly, the separation between the trigger and the event
peak. In addition, we produce colour dependent model light-curves by combining
high-resolution microlensing simulations with a realistic model for a thermal
accretion disc source. We make hypothetical target of opportunity spectroscopic
observations using our determination of the appropriate trigger as a guide. We
find that if the source spectrum varies with source radius, a 3 observation TOO
program should be able to observe a microlensing change in the continuum slope
following a light-curve trigger with a success rate of >80%.Comment: 17 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in M.N.R.A.
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