1,602 research outputs found
Distribution and kinematics of atomic and molecular gas inside the Solar circle
The detailed distribution and kinematics of the atomic and the CO-bright
molecular hydrogen in the disc of the Milky Way inside the Solar circle are
derived under the assumptions of axisymmetry and pure circular motions. We
divide the Galactic disc into a series of rings, and assume that the gas in
each ring is described by four parameters: its rotation velocity, velocity
dispersion, midplane density and its scale height. We fit these parameters to
the Galactic HI and CO (J=1-0) data by producing artificial HI and CO
line-profiles and comparing them with the observations. Our approach allows us
to fit all parameters to the data simultaneously without assuming a-priori a
radial profile for one of the parameters. We present the distribution and
kinematics of the HI and H2 in both the approaching (QIV) and the receding (QI)
regions of the Galaxy. Our best-fit models reproduces remarkably well the
observed HI and CO longitude-velocity diagrams up to a few degrees of distance
from the midplane. With the exception of the innermost 2.5 kpc, QI and QIV show
very similar kinematics. The rotation curves traced by the HI and H2 follow
closely each other, flattening beyond R=6.5 kpc. Both the HI and the H2 surface
densities show a) a deep depression at 0.5<R<2.5 kpc, analogous to that shown
by some nearby barred galaxies, b) local overdensities that can be interpreted
in terms of spiral arms or ring-like features in the disk. The HI (H2)
properties are fairly constant in the region outside the depression, with
typical velocity dispersion of 8.9+/-1.1 (4.4+/-1.2) km/s, density of
0.43+/-0.11 (0.42+/-0.22) cm-3 and HWHM scale height of 202+/-28 (64+/-12) pc.
We also show that the HI opacity in the LAB data can be accounted for by using
an `effective' spin temperature of about 150 K: assuming an optically thin
regime leads to underestimate the HI mass by about 30%.Comment: 23 pages, 24 figures. Accepted by A&
The Westerbork HI Survey of Spiral and Irregular Galaxies I. HI Imaging of Late-type Dwarf Galaxies
Neutral hydrogen observations with the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope
are presented for a sample of 73 late-type dwarf galaxies. These observations
are part of the WHISP project (Westerbork HI Survey of Spiral and Irregular
Galaxies). Here we present HI maps, velocity fields, global profiles and radial
surface density profiles of HI, as well as HI masses, HI radii and line widths.
For the late-type galaxies in our sample, we find that the ratio of HI extent
to optical diameter, defined as 6.4 disk scale lengths, is on average 1.8+-0.8,
similar to that seen in spiral galaxies. Most of the dwarf galaxies in this
sample are rich in HI, with a typical M_HI/L_B of 1.5. The relative HI content
M_HI/L_R increases towards fainter absolute magnitudes and towards fainter
surface brightnesses. Dwarf galaxies with lower average HI column densities
also have lower average optical surface brightnesses. We find that lopsidedness
is as common among dwarf galaxies as it is in spiral galaxies. About half of
the dwarf galaxies in our sample have asymmetric global profiles, a third has a
lopsided HI distribution, and about half shows signs of kinematic lopsidedness.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 18 pages. 39 MB version with all
figures is available http://www.robswork.net/publications/WHISPI.ps.g
IC 4200: a gas-rich early-type galaxy formed via a major merger
We present the result of radio and optical observations of the S0 galaxy IC
4200. We find that the galaxy hosts 8.5 billion solar masses of HI rotating on
a ~90 deg warped disk extended out to 60 kpc from the centre of the galaxy.
Optical spectroscopy reveals a simple-stellar-population-equivalent age of 1.5
Gyr in the centre of the galaxy and V- and R-band images show stellar shells.
Ionised gas is observed within the stellar body and is kinematically decoupled
from the stars and characterised by LINER-like line ratios.We interpret these
observational results as evidence for a major merger origin of IC 4200, and
date the merger back to 1-3 Gyr ago.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics; 18 pages, 13
figures; the tables of Appendix C can be downloaded at
http://www.astro.rug.nl/~pserra/IC420
Prevention of fraud, corruption and bribery committed through legal entities for the purpose of financial and economic gain
In Dutch law there is no overall criminal offence on corruption. In Dutch criminal law corruption is divided in specific criminal offences which all have their own specific definition. Most corruption can be qualified as a criminal offence but it is sometimes difficult to qualify them as such. Qualifying in general as an offence is easy (forgery for example) but proving that the act specifically qualifies as corruption is harder. Given this general observation, a specific form of active corruption in the Dutch Criminal Code (DCC) seems relevant regarding to art. 2, par. 1, section a of the Framework Decision 2003/568/JHA of 22 July 2003 on combatting corruption in the private sector. Art. 328ter par. 2 of the DCC deals with bribery of a private person: punishable is the private person that gives or offers someone other than a civil servant, working in employement or acting as an agent, in exchange for something he has done or not done or will do or refrain from doing in the performance of his burden, a gift or promise, or a service of that nature or under such circumstances that he should reasonable assume that such a gift or promise will be withheld from his employer or principal contrary to good faith. This provision covers active corruption on the initiative of all private persons, including employees, managers and directors of private entities. However, this provision is limited to the bribery of employees and managers and seems to exclude the bribery of a director of a private entity. This means that this provision does not fully cover the obligation under art. 2, par. 1, section a of the Framework Decision 2003/568/JHA. In addition to art. 328ter DCC more general provisions can be used, especcially when the active corruption involves bribery of a director of a private entity. Dependant upon the circumstances of the case the provisions on forgery, falsifying of documents and cheating could be relevant. These circumstances should then involve: the forgery of a written statement with the intention to use this statement as genuine (art. 225 DCC), the falsification of stock certificates or other official certificates or documents, (art. 226 DCC) or the elements of cheating. In art. 326 of the DCC cheating is described as: the person who intentionally favours himself or another person in a unlawfull way, by using a false name, a false capacity, cunning manouvres or fabrications, moving another person to hand over a good, a service, information or a debt
A blind H i survey in the Canes Venatici region
We have carried out a blind H i survey using the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope to make an inventory of objects with small H i masses (between 106 and 108 M⊙) and to constrain the low-mass end of the H i mass function. The survey has been conducted in a part of the volume containing the nearby Canes Venatici groups of galaxies. The surveyed region covers an area on the sky of about 86 deg2 and a range in velocity from about −450 to about 1330 km s−1. We find 70 sources in the survey by applying an automated searching algorithm. Two of the detections have not been catalogued previously, but they can be assigned an optical counterpart, based on visual inspection of the second-generation Digital Sky Survey images. Only one of the H i detections is without an optical counterpart. This object is detected in the vicinity of NGC 4822, and it has been already detected in previous H i studies. 19 of the objects have been detected for the first time in the 21-cm emission line in this survey. The distribution of the H i properties of our detections confirms our ability to find low-mass objects. 86 per cent of the detections have profile widths less than 130 km s−1, and they can be considered dwarf galaxy candidates. The H i fluxes measured imply that this survey goes about 10 times deeper than any previous blind H i survey. The H i mass function and the optical properties of the detected sources will be discussed in future paper
Large-scale HI in nearby radio galaxies: segregation in neutral gas content with radio source size
We present results of a study of neutral hydrogen (HI) in a complete sample
of nearby non-cluster radio galaxies. We find that radio galaxies with large
amounts of extended HI (M_HI >= 10^9 M_solar) all have a compact radio source.
The host galaxies of the more extended radio sources, all of Fanaroff & Riley
type-I, do not contain these amounts of HI. We discuss several possible
explanations for this segregation. The large-scale HI is mainly distributed in
disk- and ring-like structures with sizes up to 190 kpc and masses up to 2 x
10^10 M_solar. The formation of these structures could be related to past
merger events, although in some cases it may also be consistent with a
cold-accretion scenario.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A Letters. A
version with full resolution figures can be found at
http://www.astro.rug.nl/~emonts/emonts_HIletter_jan07.pd
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