5 research outputs found
An Analysis of the Environment and Gas Content of Luminous Infrared Galaxies
Luminous and ultraluminous infrared galaxies (U/LIRGs) represent a population among the most extreme in our universe, emitting an extraordinary amount of energy at infrared wavelengths from dust heated by prolific star formation and/or an active galactic nucleus (AGN). We present three investigations of U/LIRGs to better understand their global environment, their interstellar medium properties, and their nuclear region where molecular gas feeds a starburst or AGN. To study the global environment, we compute the spatial cluster-galaxy amplitude, Bgc, for 76 z 1 Jy), and at moderately high elevation (> 45°). We map Arp 193 in 12CO(2-1) with CARMA, achieving 0.18'' x 0.12'' (~65 pc) resolution, and demonstrating an improvement with C-PACS. We compute a molecular gas mass of 2 x 109 Msun and find ~20% of the total mass is in the form of molecular gas out to a radius of 750 pc. In the inner 150 pc of the nucleus, N(H2) > 1025 cm-2
Recommended from our members
The Ultraviolet-bright, Slowly Declining Transient PS1-11af as a Partial Tidal Disruption Event
We present the Pan-STARRS1 discovery of the long-lived and blue transient PS1-11af, which was also detected by Galaxy Evolution Explorer with coordinated observations in the near-ultraviolet (NUV) band. PS1-11af is associated with the nucleus of an early type galaxy at redshift z = 0.4046 that exhibits no evidence for star formation or active galactic nucleus activity. Four epochs of spectroscopy reveal a pair of transient broad absorption features in the UV on otherwise featureless spectra. Despite the superficial similarity of these features to P-Cygni absorptions of supernovae (SNe), we conclude that PS1-11af is not consistent with the properties of known types of SNe. Blackbody fits to the spectral energy distribution are inconsistent with the cooling, expanding ejecta of a SN, and the velocities of the absorption features are too high to represent material in homologous expansion near a SN photosphere. However, the constant blue colors and slow evolution of the luminosity are similar to previous optically selected tidal disruption events (TDEs). The shape of the optical light curve is consistent with models for TDEs, but the minimum accreted mass necessary to power the observed luminosity is only ~0.002 M ☉, which points to a partial disruption model. A full disruption model predicts higher bolometric luminosities, which would require most of the radiation to be emitted in a separate component at high energies where we lack observations. In addition, the observed temperature is lower than that predicted by pure accretion disk models for TDEs and requires reprocessing to a constant, lower temperature. Three deep non-detections in the radio with the Very Large Array over the first two years after the event set strict limits on the production of any relativistic outflow comparable to Swift J1644+57, even if off-axis
A Radio-selected Population of Dark, Long Gamma-ray Bursts: Comparison to the Long Gamma-ray Burst Population and Implications for Host Dust Distributions
We present cm-band and mm-band afterglow observations of five long-duration
-ray bursts (GRBs; GRB 130131A, 130420B, 130609A, 131229A, 140713A)
with dust-obscured optical afterglow emission, known as "dark" GRBs. We detect
the radio afterglow of two of the dark GRBs (GRB 130131A and 140713A), along
with a tentative detection of a third (GRB 131229A) with the Karl G. Jansky
Very Large Array (VLA). Supplemented by three additional VLA-detected dark GRBs
from the literature, we present uniform modeling of their broadband afterglows.
We derive high line-of-sight dust extinctions of . Additionally, we model the host galaxies of the six bursts in
our sample, and derive host galaxy dust extinctions of . Across all tested -ray (fluence and duration) and
afterglow properties (energy scales, geometries and circumburst densities), we
find dark GRBs to be representative of more typical unobscured long GRBs,
except in fluence, for which observational biases and inconsistent
classification may influence the dark GRB distribution. Additionally, we find
that is not related to a uniform distribution of dust
throughout the host, nor to the extremely local environment of the burst,
indicating that a larger scale patchy dust distribution is the cause of the
high line-of-sight extinction. Since radio observations are invaluable to
revealing heavily dust-obscured GRBs, we make predictions for the detection of
radio emission from host star formation with the next generation VLA.Comment: 40 pages, 15 figures, submitted to Ap
Science-Driven Optimization of the LSST Observing Strategy
The Large Synoptic Survey Telescope is designed to provide an unprecedented optical imaging dataset that will support investigations of our Solar System, Galaxy and Universe, across half the sky and over ten years of repeated observation. However, exactly how the LSST observations will be taken (the observing strategy or "cadence") is not yet finalized. In this dynamically-evolving community white paper, we explore how the detailed performance of the anticipated science investigations is expected to depend on small changes to the LSST observing strategy. Using realistic simulations of the LSST schedule and observation properties, we design and compute diagnostic metrics and Figures of Merit that provide quantitative evaluations of different observing strategies, analyzing their impact on a wide range of proposed science projects. This is work in progress: we are using this white paper to communicate to each other the relative merits of the observing strategy choices that could be made, in an effort to maximize the scientific value of the survey. The investigation of some science cases leads to suggestions for new strategies that could be simulated and potentially adopted. Notably, we find motivation for exploring departures from a spatially uniform annual tiling of the sky: focusing instead on different parts of the survey area in different years in a "rolling cadence" is likely to have significant benefits for a number of time domain and moving object astronomy projects. The communal assembly of a suite of quantified and homogeneously coded metrics is the vital first step towards an automated, systematic, science-based assessment of any given cadence simulation, that will enable the scheduling of the LSST to be as well-informed as possible