82 research outputs found
Spitzer Analysis of HII Region Complexes in the Magellanic Clouds: Determining a Suitable Monochromatic Obscured Star Formation Indicator
HII regions are the birth places of stars, and as such they provide the best
measure of current star formation rates (SFRs) in galaxies. The close proximity
of the Magellanic Clouds allows us to probe the nature of these star forming
regions at small spatial scales. We aim to determine the monochromatic IR band
that most accurately traces the bolometric IR flux (TIR), which can then be
used to estimate an obscured SFR. We present the spatial analysis, via
aperture/annulus photometry, of 16 LMC and 16 SMC HII region complexes using
the Spitzer IRAC and MIPS bands. UV rocket data and SHASSA H-alpha data are
also included. We find that nearly all of the LMC and SMC HII region SEDs peak
around 70um, from ~10 to ~400 pc from the central sources. As a result, the
sizes of HII regions as probed by 70um is approximately equal to the sizes as
probed by TIR (about 70 pc in radius); the radial profile of the 70um flux,
normalized by TIR, is constant at all radii (70um ~ 0.45 TIR); the 1-sigma
standard deviation of the 70um fluxes, normalized by TIR, is a lower fraction
of the mean (0.05 to 0.12 out to ~220 pc) than the normalized 8, 24, and 160um
normalized fluxes (0.12 to 0.52); and these results are invariant between the
LMC and SMC. From these results, we argue that 70um is the most suitable IR
band to use as a monochromatic obscured star formation indicator because it
most accurately reproduces the TIR of HII regions in the LMC and SMC and over
large spatial scales. We also explore the general trends of the 8, 24, 70, and
160um bands in the LMC and SMC HII region SEDs, radial surface brightness
profiles, sizes, and normalized (by TIR) radial flux profiles. We derive an
obscured SFR equation that is modified from the literature to use 70um
luminosity, SFR(Mo/yr) = 9.7(0.7)x10^{-44} L(70)(ergs/s), which is applicable
from 10 to 300 pc distance from the center of an HII region.Comment: 21 pages, 12 figures, 4 tables. Will be published in ApJ
Spitzer Sage Survey of the Large Magellanic Cloud. III. Star Formation and ~1000 New Candidate Young Stellar Objects
We present ~1000 new candidate Young Stellar Objects (YSOs) in the Large Magellanic Cloud selected from Spitzer Space Telescope data, as part of the Surveying the Agents of a Galaxy's Evolution (SAGE) Legacy program. The YSOs, detected by their excess infrared (IR) emission, represent early stages of evolution, still surrounded by disks and/or infalling envelopes. Previously, fewer than 20 such YSOs were known. The candidate YSOs were selected from the SAGE Point Source Catalog from regions of color-magnitude space least confused with other IR-bright populations. The YSOs are biased toward intermediate- to high-mass and young evolutionary stages, because these overlap less with galaxies and evolved stars in color-magnitude space. The YSOs are highly correlated spatially with atomic and molecular gas, and are preferentially located in the shells and bubbles created by massive stars inside. They are more clustered than generic point sources, as expected if star formation occurs in filamentary clouds or shells. We applied a more stringent color-magnitude selection to produce a subset of "high-probability" YSO candidates. We fitted the spectral-energy distributions (SEDs) of this subset and derived physical properties for those that were well fitted. The total mass of these well-fitted YSOs is ~2900 M_☉ and the total luminosity is ~2.1 × 10^6 L_☉ . By extrapolating the mass function with a standard initial mass function and integrating, we calculate a current star-formation rate of ~0.06 M_☉ yr^(–1), which is at the low end of estimates based on total ultraviolet and IR flux from the galaxy (~0.05 – 0.25 M_☉ yr^(–1)), consistent with the expectation that our current YSO list is incomplete. Follow-up spectroscopy and further data mining will better separate the different IR-bright populations and likely increase the estimated number of YSOs. The full YSO list is available as electronic tables, and the SEDs are available as an electronic figure for further use by the scientific community
Spitzer SAGE survey of the Large Magellanic Cloud II: Evolved Stars and Infrared Color Magnitude Diagrams
Color-magnitude diagrams (CMDs) are presented for the Spitzer SAGE (Surveying
the Agents of a Galaxy's Evolution) survey of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC).
IRAC and MIPS 24 um epoch one data are presented. These data represent the
deepest, widest mid-infrared CMDs of their kind ever produced in the LMC.
Combined with the 2MASS survey, the diagrams are used to delineate the evolved
stellar populations in the Large Magellanic Cloud as well as Galactic
foreground and extragalactic background populations. Some 32000 evolved stars
brighter than the tip of the red giant branch are identified. Of these,
approximately 17500 are classified as oxygen-rich, 7000 carbon-rich, and
another 1200 as ``extreme'' asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars. Brighter
members of the latter group have been called ``obscured'' AGB stars in the
literature owing to their dusty circumstellar envelopes. A large number (1200)
of luminous oxygen--rich AGB stars/M supergiants are also identified. Finally,
there is strong evidence from the 24 um MIPS channel that previously
unexplored, lower luminosity oxygen-rich AGB stars contribute significantly to
the mass loss budget of the LMC (1200 such sources are identified).Comment: LaTex, 31 pages, 10 figures. Accepted for publication in the
Astronomical Journa
Direct measurement of the pion valence quark momentum distribution, the pion light-cone wave function squared
We present the first direct measurements of the pion valence quark momentum
distribution which is related to the square of the pion light-cone wave
function. The measurements were carried out using data on diffractive
dissociation of 500 GeV/c into di-jets from a platinum target at
Fermilab experiment E791. The results show that the light-cone
asymptotic wave function, which was developed using perturbative QCD methods,
describes the data well for or more. We also
measured the transverse momentum distribution of the diffractive di-jets.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
A spatially resolved study of photoelectric heating and [CII] cooling in the LMC
(abridged) We study photoelectric heating throughout the Large Magellanic
Cloud. We quantify the importance of the [CII] cooling line and the
photoelectric heating process of various environments in the LMC and
investigate which parameters control the extent of photoelectric heating. We
use the BICE [CII] map and the Spitzer/SAGE infrared maps. We examine the
spatial variations in the efficiency of photoelectric heating: photoelectric
heating rate over power absorbed by grains. We correlate the photoelectric
heating efficiency and the emission from various dust constituents and study
the variations as a function of H\alpha emission, dust temperatures, and the
total infrared luminosity. From this we estimate radiation field, gas
temperature, and electron density. We find systematic variations in
photoelectric efficiency. The highest efficiencies are found in the diffuse
medium, while the lowest coincide with bright star-forming regions (~1.4 times
lower). The [CII] line emission constitutes 1.32% of the far infrared
luminosity across the whole of the LMC. We find correlations between the [CII]
emission and ratios of the mid infrared and far infrared bands, which comprise
various dust constituents. The correlations are interpreted in light of the
spatial variations of the dust abundance and by the local environmental
conditions that affect the dust emission properties. As a function of the total
infrared surface brightness, S_{TIR}, the [CII] surface brightness can be
described as: S_{[CII]}=1.25 S_{TIR}^{0.69} [10^{-3} erg s^{-1} cm^{-2}
sr^{-1}]. The [CII] emission is well-correlation with the 8 micrometer
emission, suggesting that the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons play a dominant
role in the photoelectric heating process.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A, 16 pages, 17 figure
Search for Rare and Forbidden Charm Meson Decays D0--> V l+ l- and h h l l
We report the results of a search for flavor-changing neutral current,
lepton-flavor, and lepton-number violating decays of the 3 and 4-body decay
modes of D0 (and its antiparticle) containing muons and electrons. Using data
from Fermilab charm hadroproduction experiment E791, we examine modes with two
leptons and either a Rho(0), Kstar, or Phi vector meson or a non-resonant Pi
Pi, K Pi, or K K pair of pseudoscalar mesons. No evidence for any of these
decays is found. Therefore, we present branching-fraction upper limits at 90%
confidence level for the 27 decay modes examined (18 new).Comment: 5 pages, 1 Figure, Submitted to PR
The 2.5 m Telescope of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
We describe the design, construction, and performance of the Sloan Digital
Sky Survey Telescope located at Apache Point Observatory. The telescope is a
modified two-corrector Ritchey-Chretien design which has a 2.5-m, f/2.25
primary, a 1.08-m secondary, a Gascoigne astigmatism corrector, and one of a
pair of interchangeable highly aspheric correctors near the focal focal plane,
one for imaging and the other for spectroscopy. The final focal ratio is f/5.
The telescope is instrumented by a wide-area, multiband CCD camera and a pair
of fiber-fed double spectrographs. Novel features of the telescope include: (1)
A 3 degree diameter (0.65 m) focal plane that has excellent image quality and
small geometrical distortions over a wide wavelength range (3000 to 10,600
Angstroms) in the imaging mode, and good image quality combined with very small
lateral and longitudinal color errors in the spectroscopic mode. The unusual
requirement of very low distortion is set by the demands of
time-delay-and-integrate (TDI) imaging; (2) Very high precision motion to
support open loop TDI observations; and (3) A unique wind baffle/enclosure
construction to maximize image quality and minimize construction costs. The
telescope had first light in May 1998 and began regular survey operations in
2000.Comment: 87 pages, 27 figures. AJ (in press, April 2006
- …