563 research outputs found
Properties of the unusual galaxy PSC 09104+4109
The IRAS source PSC 09104+4109 is tentatively identified with a faint emission line galaxy having z = 0.442. Assuming this identification is correct, the total infrared luminosity of this galaxy is estimated to be 5 x 10 to the 12th power L sub 0, among the highest for galaxies detected by IRAS. This energy is concentrated at wavelengths less than 30 micrometers, and is approx. 50 times greater than the estimated optical luminosity. The serendipitous way in which this source was found in the PSC catalog suggests that many more similar objects may be found at the lowest levels of the IRAS survey
VLT/VIMOS Observations of an Occulting Galaxy Pair: Redshifts and Effective Extinction Curve
We present VLT/VIMOS IFU observations of an occulting galaxy pair previously
discovered in HST observations. The foreground galaxy is a low-inclination
spiral disk, which causes clear attenuation features seen against the bright
bulge and disk of the background galaxy. We find redshifts of and z=0.065 for the foreground and background galaxy respectively.
This relatively small difference does not rule out gravitational interaction
between the two galaxies. Emission line ratios point to a star-forming, not
AGN-dominated foreground galaxy.
We fit the Cardelli, Clayton & Mathis (CCM) extinction law to the spectra of
individual fibres to derive slope () and normalization (). The
normalization agrees with the HST attenuation map and the slope is lower than
the Milky Way relation (), which is likely linked to the spatial
sampling of the disk. We speculate that the values of point to either
coherent ISM structures in the disk larger than usual ( kpc) or higher
starting values of , indicative of recent processing of the dust.
The foreground galaxy is a low stellar mass spiral () with a high dust content (). The dust disk geometry visible in the HST image would explain the
observed SED properties of smaller galaxies: a lower mean dust temperature, a
high dust-to-stellar mass ratio but relatively little optical attenuation.
Ongoing efforts to find occulting pairs with a small foreground galaxies will
show how common this geometry is.Comment: 16 pages, 3 tables, 13 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Induced star formation in interacting galaxies
Measurements of H alpha emission line fluxes and FIR fluxes in approx. 100 interacting spirals were used to investigate the effects of close tidal interactions on the disk and nuclear star formation rates in galaxies. Two samples of interacting spirals were studied, a complete sample of close pairs, and a set of strongly perturbed systems from the Arp atlas. Both the integrated H alpha luminosities and FIR luminosities are enhanced in the interacting galaxies, indicating that the encounters indeed trigger massive star formation in many cases. The response of individual galaxies is highly variable, however. A majority of the interacting spirals exhibit normal star formation rates, while a small fraction are undergoing bursts with luminosities which are rarely, if ever, observed in noninteracting systems. Virtually all of the latter are in the Arp sample, indicating that the Arp atlas is heavily biased to the most active star forming systems
Paired and Interacting Galaxies: International Astronomical Union Colloquium No. 124
The proceedings of the International Astronomical Union Colloquium No. 124, held at the University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa, on December 4 to 7, are given. The purpose of the conference was to describe the current state of theoretical and observational knowledge of interacting galaxies, with particular emphasis on galaxies in pairs
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