135 research outputs found

    CC Bootis: QSO, Not Variable Halo Giant

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    The poorly-studied, faint (18<m_pg<19.5) variable star CC Bootis has been noted in the literature as a candidate for a halo red giant. It proves instead to be a quasi-stellar object of redshift z=0.172, and is detected as an X-ray source by ROSAT. In addition to its odd heritage, CC Boo exhibits unusually high amplitude optical variability for an optically-selected QSO.Comment: 6 pages including 1 table and 2 figures; Accepted for publication in Pub. Astr. Soc. Pacific, Vol 109, June 199

    Observations made with the International Ultraviolet Explorer

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    Observations were made with the International Ultraviolet Explorer of two quite diverse astronomical objects. The first is an extremely ultraviolet excess star projected near the globular cluster M5. The second is a previously unrecognized but very bright starburst galaxy. Each of these objects is discussed in detail

    Related investigations on the physics of high energy emission from active galactic nuclei

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    The Final Technical Report on a number of related investigations on the physics of high energy emission from active galactic nuclei, such as Seyfert galaxies and quasi-stellar objects is presented. The chief conclusions of the work are briefly described, and citations to the papers supported by this grant and published in the refereed scientific literature are provided. Areas of research included: 'warm' galaxies observed in x rays; x ray/infrared correlations in galaxies; the contribution of active galaxies to the cosmic x ray background radiation; and an unusual x ray emitting starburst galaxy

    Photometry of GX 349+2: Evidence for a 22-hour Period

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    The intense galactic X-ray source GX 349+2 (Sco X-2) belongs to the class of persistently bright low-mass X-ray binaries called Z-sources. GX 349+2, although observed in X-rays for more than 30 years, has only recently been optically identified with a 19th mag star. Of the six known Z-sources, only two (Sco X-1 and Cyg X-2) have been studied in the optical. It has been suggested that Z-sources as a group are characterized by evolved companions and correspondingly long orbital periods (Sco X-1, P=0.8 d; Cyg X-2, P=9.8 d). Recently Southwell et al. (1996) have presented spectroscopic observations of GX 349+2 suggesting a 14 d orbital period. We have obtained broadband photometry of the system on six consecutive nights, and find a statistically significant 21.85 +/- 0.4 h (3 sigma) period of 0.14 mag half-amplitude, superposed on erratic flickering typical of Sco X-1 type objects. As with other Z-sources, caution will be needed to insure that the variations are truly periodic, and not simply due to chaotic variability observed over a relatively short time span. Depending on the origin of the brightness variations, our proposed period could be either the orbital or half the orbital period. If our period is confirmed, then the nature of the 14 d spectroscopic variation found by Southwell et al. (1996) is unclear. There is evidence that the mass function of GX 349+2 is similar to that of Sco X-1.Comment: 17 pages including 3 tables and 5 figures; Uses AASTeX 4.0; Accepted for publication in The Astronomical Journal, volume 112, December 199

    The Recognition of Unusual Objects in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Color System

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    We present 5 filter photometry of 21 carbon stars, 15 asteroids, 15 cataclysmic variables, 6 metal-poor stars, 5 Cepheids, 1775 field stars, blue horizontal branch (BHB) stars and RR Lyrae stars in the globular clusters M 15 and M 2, two primary standards, and 19 secondary standards. The photometry was carried out using a filter set identical to that which will be used for the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. We find that carbon stars, CVs, R-type, J-type, and V-type asteroids, BHB stars, and RR Lyr stars should be identifiable on the basis of SDSS photometry alone, while Cepheids, metal-poor stars, and many types of asteroids are indistinguishable from the stellar locus of field stars.Comment: 44 pages, 13 postscript figures. Accepted for publication in Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, vol. 110, November 1998. Uses AAS Latex style file, version 4.

    A Census of Object Types and Redshift Estimates in the SDSS Photometric Catalog from a Trained Decision-Tree Classifier

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    We have applied ClassX, an oblique decision tree classifier optimized for astronomical analysis, to the homogeneous multicolor imaging data base of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), training the software on subsets of SDSS objects whose nature is precisely known via spectroscopy. We find that the software, using photometric data only, correctly classifies a very large fraction of the objects with existing SDSS spectra, both stellar and extragalactic. ClassX also accurately predicts the redshifts of both normal and active galaxies in SDSS. To illustrate ClassX applications in SDSS research, we (a) derive the object content of the SDSS DR2 photometric catalog and (b) provide a sample catalog of resolved SDSS objects that contains a large number of candidate AGN galaxies, 27,000, along with 63,000 candidate normal galaxies at magnitudes substantially fainter than typical magnitudes of SDSS spectroscopic objects. The surface density of AGN selected by ClassX to i~19 is in agreement with that quoted by SDSS. When ClassX is applied to the photometric data fainter than the SDSS spectroscopic limit, the inferred surface density of AGN rises sharply, as expected. The ability of the classifier to accurately constrain the redshifts of huge numbers (ultimately ~ 10^7) of active galaxies in the photometric data base promises new insights into fundamental issues of AGN research, such as the evolution of the AGN luminosity function with cosmic time, the starburst--AGN connection, and AGN--galactic morphology relationships.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astronomical Journal, Vol. 130, 2005; 33 pages, 10 figures, 5 tables, AASTeX v5.0. Table 5 will be electronic in the published journal, but available now at http://www-int.stsci.edu/~margon/table5.ascii and http://www-int.stsci.edu/~margon/table5.ascii.g

    An Ultraviolet-Excess Optical Candidate for the Luminous Globular Cluster X-ray Source in NGC1851

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    The intense, bursting X-ray source in the globular cluster NGC 1851 was one of the first cluster sources discovered, but has remained optically unidentified for 25 years. We report here on results from Hubble Space Telescope WFPC2 multicolor images in NGC 1851. Our high spatial resolution images resolve ~200 objects in the 3'' radius Einstein X-ray error circle, 40 times as many as in previous ground-based work. A color-magnitude diagram of the cluster clearly reveals a markedly UV-excess object with B~21, (U-B) ~ -0.9 only 2'' from the X-ray position. The UV-excess candidate is 0.12'' distant from a second, unremarkable star that is 0.5 mag brighter in B; thus ground-based studies of this field are probably impractical. Three other UV-excess objects are also present among the ~16,000 objects in the surveyed region of the cluster, leaving a ~5% probability that a UV-excess object has fallen in the X-ray error circle by chance. No variability of the candidate is seen in these data, although a more complete study is required. If this object is in fact the counterpart of the X-ray source, previous inferences that some globular cluster X-ray sources are optically subluminous with respect to low-mass X-ray binaries in the field are now strengthened.Comment: 13 pages including 1 table and 3 figures in AASTeX 4.0; To appear in The Astrophysical Journal Letters, volume 472 (1996 December 1). Preprint with full-resolution figures available at http://www.astro.washington.edu/deutsch/pubs/pubs.htm

    Complex Velocity Fields in the Shell of T Pyxidis

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    We present spatially-resolved, moderate-resolution spectrophotometry of the recurrent nova T Pyx and a portion of the surrounding shell. The spectrum extracted from a strip of width 10'' centered on the star shows well-known, strong emission lines typical of old novae, plus a prominent, unfamiliar emission line at 6590 Angstroms. This line, and a weaker companion at 6540 Angstroms which we also detect, have been previously reported by Shahbaz et al., and attributed to Doppler-shifted H alpha emission from a collimated jet emerging from T Pyx. We demonstrate that these lines are instead due to [NII] 6548, 6584 from a complex velocity field in the surrounding nebula. The comments of past workers concerning the great strength of HeII 4686 in T Pyx itself are also reiterated.Comment: 8 pages including 2 figures; Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal Letter
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