1,491 research outputs found
Spatially resolved optical and near infrared spectroscopy of I Zw 18
For a long time, I Zw 18 has been recognized as the lowest abundance extra-galactic HII region (with the possible recent exception of SBS 0335-052; Izotov 1989). As such, it is important for many studies, including the determination of the primordial helium abundance. Recent imaging studies of I Zw 18 have revealed a more complex structure to I Zw 18 than the simple two-component model previously assumed. This has given rise to concern about the reliability of chemical abundance measurements derived for I Zw 18. Researchers have obtained long-slit spectra covering the wavelength range lambda 3650 to lambda 10,000, which allow us to measure physical parameters and chemical abundances as a function of position. With these new data we can investigate the SE component, which has not been studied previously, and we can address some of the concerns about abundance uncertainties
High chemical abundances in stripped Virgo spiral galaxies
Based on a comparison of the oxygen abundances in H 2 regions in field and Virgo cluster late type spiral galaxies, Shields, Skillman, & Kennicutt (1991) suggested that the highly stripped spiral galaxies in the Virgo cluster have systematically higher abundances than comparable field galaxies. In April 1991 and May 1992 we used the blue channel spectrograph on the MMT to obtain new observations of 30 H 2 regions in Virgo spiral galaxies. These spectra cover the wavelength range from (O II) lambda 3727 to (S II) lambda 6731. We now have observed at least 4 H II regions in 9 spiral galaxies in the Virgo cluster. Combining (O II) and (O III) line strengths, we calculate the H II region oxygen abundances based on the empirical calibration of Edmunds & Pagel (1984). These observations show: (1) The stripped, low luminosity Virgo spirals (N4689, N4571) truly have abundances characteristic of much more luminous field spirals; (2) Virgo spirals which show no evidence of stripping (N4651, N4713) have abundances comparable to field galaxies; and (3) Evidence for transition galaxies (e.g., N4254, N4321), with marginally stripped disks and marginal abundance enhancements. The new observations presented here confirm the validity of the oxygen over-abundances in the stripped Virgo spirals. Shields et al. (1991) discussed two different mechanisms for producing the higher abundances in the disks of stripped galaxies in Virgo. The first is the supression of infall of near-primordial material, the second is the suppression of radial inflow of metal-poor gas. Distinguishing between the two cases will require more observations of the Virgo cluster spirals and a better understanding of which parameters determine the variation of abundance with radius in field spirals (cf., Garnett & Shields 1987)
Measuring the Hubble Constant with the Hubble Space Telescope
Ten years ago our team completed the Hubble Space Telescope Key Project on
the extragalactic distance scale. Cepheids were detected in some 25 galaxies
and used to calibrate four secondary distance indicators that reach out into
the expansion field beyond the noise of galaxy peculiar velocities. The result
was H_0 = 72 +/- 8 km/sec/Mpc and put an end to galaxy distances uncertain by a
factor of two. This work has been awarded the Gruber Prize in Cosmology for
2009.Comment: Gruber Prize Lecture to be published in Transactions of the IA
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Star cluster catalogues for the LEGUS dwarf galaxies
We present the star cluster catalogues for 17 dwarf and irregular galaxies in the HST Treasury Program 'Legacy ExtraGalactic UV Survey' (LEGUS). Cluster identification and photometry in this sub-sample are similar to that of the entire LEGUS sample, but special methods were developed to provide robust catalogues with accurate fluxes due to low cluster statistics. The colours and ages are largely consistent for two widely used aperture corrections, but a significant fraction of the clusters are more compact than the average training cluster. However, the ensemble luminosity, mass, and age distributions are consistent suggesting that the systematics between the two methods are less than the random errors. When compared with the clusters from previous dwarf galaxy samples, we find that the LEGUS catalogues are more complete and provide more accurate total fluxes. Combining all clusters into a composite dwarf galaxy, we find that the luminosity and mass functions can be described by a power law with the canonical index of -2 independent of age and global SFR binning. The age distribution declines as a power law, with an index of approximate to -0.80 +/- 0.15, independent of cluster mass and global SFR binning. This decline of clusters is dominated by cluster disruption since the combined star formation histories and integrated-light SFRs are both approximately constant over the last few hundred Myr. Finally, we find little evidence for an upper-mass cut-off (< 2 sigma) in the composite cluster mass function, and can rule out a truncation mass below approximate to 10(4.5)M(circle dot) but cannot rule out the existence of a truncation at higher masses.NASA [NAS 5-26555]; NASA; Swedish Research Council (Vetenskapsradet); Swedish National Space Board (SNSB); German Aerospace Center (DLR); Federal Ministry for EconomicAffairs and Energy (BMWi) [50OR1801]; [13364]This item from the UA Faculty Publications collection is made available by the University of Arizona with support from the University of Arizona Libraries. If you have questions, please contact us at [email protected]
PPAK Wide-field Integral Field Spectroscopy of NGC 628: II. Emission line abundance analysis
In this second paper of the series, we present the 2-dimensional (2D)
emission line abundance analysis of NGC 628, the largest object within the PPAK
Integral Field Spectroscopy (IFS) Nearby Galaxies Survey: PINGS. We introduce
the methodology applied to the 2D IFS data in order to extract and deal with
large spectral samples, from which a 2D abundance analysis can be later
performed. We obtain the most complete and reliable abundance gradient of the
galaxy up-to-date, by using the largest number of spectroscopic points sampled
in the galaxy, and by comparing the statistical significance of different
strong-line metallicity indicators. We find features not previously reported
for this galaxy that imply a multi-modality of the abundance gradient
consistent with a nearly flat-distribution in the innermost regions of the
galaxy, a steep negative gradient along the disc and a shallow gradient or
nearly-constant metallicity beyond the optical edge of the galaxy. The N/O
ratio seems to follow the same radial behaviour. We demonstrate that the
observed dispersion in metallicity shows no systematic dependence with the
spatial position, signal-to-noise or ionization conditions, implying that the
scatter in abundance for a given radius is reflecting a true spatial physical
variation of the oxygen content. Furthermore, by exploiting the 2D IFS data, we
were able to construct the 2D metallicity structure of the galaxy, detecting
regions of metal enhancement, and showing that they vary depending on the
choice of the metallicity estimator. The analysis of axisymmetric variations in
the disc of NGC 628 suggest that the physical conditions and the star formation
history of different-symmetric regions of the galaxy have evolved in a
different manner.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 40 pages, 22 figures, online data:
http://www.ast.cam.ac.uk/ioa/research/ping
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