151 research outputs found

    Modeling the Infrared Emission from Cygnus A

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    The Spitzer Space Telescope provides a unique view of the Universe at infrared wavelengths. Improved sensitivity and angular resolution over previous missions enable detailed studies of astrophysical objects, both in imaging and spectroscopic modes. Spitzer observations of active galactic nuclei can help shed light on the physical conditions of the central regions of these active glalaxies. The nearby radio galaxy Cygnus A is one of the most luminous radio sources in the local Universe. In addition to the high radio power, it is also very luminous in the infrared. New Spitzer spectroscopy and photometry of Cygnus A is combined with data from the literature at radio and sub-mm wavelengths. The resulting complication is modeled with a combination of: a synchrotron emitting jet, a burst of star formation, and emission from an AGN torus. The infrared emission in Cyngus A shows contributions from all three processes and the models are able to reproduce the observed emission over almost 5 dex in frequency. The bolometric AGN luminosity is found to be ~10^45 erg s^-1, with a clumpy torus size of ~7 pc. Evidence is seen for a break in the synchrotron spectrum in the mid-infrared. The relevant component of the infrared emission suggests Cygnus A has a star formation rate of ~20 M_sun yr^-1. Even in the absence of the AGN, it would still be a luminous infrared source.Comment: MS thesis (Imaging Science). 94 pages. 35 figure

    On the Interpretation of Far-infrared Spectral Energy Distributions. I: The 850 μ\mum Molecular Mass Estimator

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    We use a suite of cosmological zoom galaxy formation simulations and dust radiative transfer calculations to explore the use of the monochromatic 850 μm850~\mu m luminosity (Lν,850_{\rm \nu,850}) as a molecular gas mass (Mmol_{\rm mol}) estimator in galaxies between 0<z<9.50 < z < 9.5 for a broad range of masses. For our fiducial simulations, where we assume the dust mass is linearly related to the metal mass, we find that empirical Lν,850_{\rm \nu,850}-Mmol_{\rm mol} calibrations accurately recover the molecular gas mass of our model galaxies, and that the Lν,850_{\rm \nu,850}-dependent calibration is preferred. We argue the major driver of scatter in the Lν,850_{\rm \nu,850}-Mmol_{\rm mol} relation arises from variations in the molecular gas to dust mass ratio, rather than variations in the dust temperature, in agreement with the previous study of Liang et al. Emulating a realistic measurement strategy with ALMA observing bands that are dependent on the source redshift, we find that estimating Sν,850_{\rm \nu,850} from continuum emission at a different frequency contributes 1020%10-20\% scatter to the Lν,850_{\rm \nu,850}-Mmol_{\rm mol} relation. This additional scatter arises from a combination of mismatches in assumed Tdust_{dust} and β\beta values, as well as the fact that the SEDs are not single-temperature blackbodies.Finally we explore the impact of a dust prescription in which the dust-to-metals ratio varies with metallicity. Though the resulting mean dust temperatures are 50%\sim50\% higher, the dust mass is significantly decreased for low-metallicity halos. As a result, the observationally calibrated Lν,850_{\rm \nu,850}-Mmol_{\rm mol} relation holds for massive galaxies, independent of the dust model, but below Lν,8501028_{\rm \nu,850}\lesssim10^{28} erg s1^{-1} (metallicities log10(Z/Z)0.8\log_{10}({\rm Z}/{\rm Z}_{\odot})\lesssim -0.8) we expect galaxies may deviate from literature observational calibrations by 0.5\gtrsim0.5 dex.Comment: 23 pages and 12 figures including appendices, published in the Astrophysical Journal, abstract shortened due to arXiv restriction

    Recovering the Physical Properties of Molecular Gas in Galaxies from CO SLED Modeling

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    Modeling of the spectral line energy distribution (SLED) of the CO molecule can reveal the physical conditions (temperature, density) of molecular gas in Galactic clouds and other galaxies. Recently, the Herschel Space Observatory and ALMA have offered, for the first time, a comprehensive view of the rotational J = 4-3 through J = 13-12 lines, which arise from a complex, diverse range of physical conditions that must be simplified to one, two, or three components when modeled. Here we investigate the recoverability of physical conditions from SLEDs produced by galaxy evolution simulations containing a large dynamical range in physical properties. These simulated SLEDs were generally fit well by one component of gas whose properties largely resemble or slightly underestimate the luminosity-weighted properties of the simulations when clumping due to non-thermal velocity dispersion is taken into account. If only modeling the first three rotational lines, the median values of the marginalized parameter distributions better represent the luminosity-weighted properties of the simulations, but the uncertainties in the fitted parameters are nearly an order of magnitude, compared to approximately 0.2 dex in the "best-case" scenario of a fully sampled SLED through J = 10-9. This study demonstrates that while common CO SLED modeling techniques cannot reveal the underlying complexities of the molecular gas, they can distinguish bulk luminosity-weighted properties that vary with star formation surface densities and galaxy evolution, if a sufficient number of lines are detected and modeled.Comment: 13 pages, accepted by The Astrophysical Journa

    WFPC2 LRF Imaging of Emission Line Nebulae in 3CR Radio Galaxies

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    We present HST/WFPC2 Linear Ramp Filter images of high surface brightness emission lines (either [OII], [OIII], or H-alpha+[NII]) in 80 3CR radio sources. We overlay the emission line images on high resolution VLA radio images (eight of which are new reductions of archival data) in order to examine the spatial relationship between the optical and radio emission. We confirm that the radio and optical emission line structures are consistent with weak alignment at low redshift (z < 0.6) except in the Compact Steep Spectrum (CSS) radio galaxies where both the radio source and the emission line nebulae are on galactic scales and strong alignment is seen at all redshifts. There are weak trends for the aligned emission line nebulae to be more luminous, and for the emission line nebula size to increase with redshift and/or radio power. The combination of these results suggests that there is a limited but real capacity for the radio source to influence the properties of the emission line nebulae at these low redshifts (z < 0.6). Our results are consistent with previous suggestions that both mechanical and radiant energy are responsible for generating alignment between the radio source and emission line gas.Comment: 80 pages, 54 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ

    A Widespread, Clumpy Starburst in the Isolated Ongoing Dwarf Galaxy Merger dm1647+21

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    Interactions between pairs of isolated dwarf galaxies provide a critical window into low-mass hierarchical, gas-dominated galaxy assembly and the buildup of stellar mass in low-metallicity systems. We present the first VLT/MUSE optical IFU observations of the interacting dwarf pair dm1647+21, selected from the TiNy Titans survey. The Hα\alpha emission is widespread and corresponds to a total unobscured star formation rate (SFR) of 0.44 M_{\odot} yr1^{-1}, 2.7 times higher than the SFR inferred from SDSS data. The implied specific SFR (sSFR) for the system is elevated by more than an order of magnitude above non-interacting dwarfs in the same mass range. This increase is dominated by the lower-mass galaxy, which has a sSFR enhancement of >> 50. Examining the spatially-resolved maps of classic optical line diagnostics, we find the ISM excitation can be fully explained by star formation. The velocity field of the ionized gas is not consistent with simple rotation. Dynamical simulations indicate that the irregular velocity field and the stellar structure is consistent with the identification of this system as an ongoing interaction between two dwarf galaxies. The widespread, clumpy enhancements in star formation in this system point to important differences in the effect of mergers on dwarf galaxies, compared to massive galaxies: rather than the funneling of gas to the nucleus and giving rise to a nuclear starburst, starbursts in low-mass galaxy mergers may be triggered by large-scale ISM compression, and thus be more distributed.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. 11 pages, 5 figures, 1 table. Figures slightly degraded to meet arXiv size restrictions. For more information about TiNy Titans see https://lavinia.as.arizona.edu/~tinytitans

    Global Properties of Neutral Hydrogen in Compact Groups

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    Compact groups of galaxies provide a unique environment to study the evolution of galaxies amid frequent gravitational encounters. These nearby groups have conditions similar to those in the earlier universe when galaxies were assembled and give us the opportunity to witness hierarchical formation in progress. To understand how the compact group environment affects galaxy evolution, we examine the gas and dust in these groups. We present new single-dish GBT neutral hydrogen (HI) observations of 30 compact groups and define a new way to quantify the group HI content as the HI-to-stellar mass ratio of the group as a whole. We compare the HI content with mid-IR indicators of star formation and optical [g-r] color to search for correlations between group gas content and star formation activity of individual group members. Quiescent galaxies tend to live in HI-poor groups, and galaxies with active star formation are more commonly found in HI-rich groups. Intriguingly, we also find "rogue" galaxies whose star formation does not correlate with group HI content. In particular, we identify three galaxies (NGC 2968 in RSCG 34, KUG 1131+202A in RSCG 42, and NGC 4613 in RSCG 64) whose mid-IR activity is discrepant with the HI. We speculate that this mismatch between mid-IR activity and HI content is a consequence of strong interactions in this environment that can strip HI from galaxies and abruptly affect star-formation. Ultimately, characterizing how and on what timescales the gas is processed in compact groups will help us understand the interstellar medium in complex, dense environments similar to the earlier Universe.Comment: Accepted to A
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