6,194 research outputs found
H II Region Driven Galactic Bubbles And Their Relationship To The Galactic Magnetic Field
The relative alignments of mid-infrared traced Galactic bubbles are compared to the orientation of the mean Galactic magnetic field in the disk. The orientations of bubbles in the northern Galactic plane were measured and are consistent with random orientations-no preferential alignment with respect to the Galactic disk was found. A subsample of H II region driven Galactic bubbles was identified, and as a single population they show random orientations. When this subsample was further divided into subthermal and suprathermal H II regions, based on hydrogen radio recombination linewidths, the subthermal H II regions showed a marginal deviation from random orientations, but the suprathermal H II regions showed significant alignment with the Galactic plane. The mean orientation of the Galactic disk magnetic field was characterized using new near-infrared starlight polarimetry and the suprathermal H II regions were found to preferentially align with the disk magnetic field. If suprathermal linewidths are associated with younger H II regions, then the evolution of young H II regions is significantly affected by the Galactic magnetic field. As H II regions age, they cease to be strongly linked to the Galactic magnetic field, as surrounding density variations come to dominate their morphological evolution. From the new observations, the ratios of magnetic-to-ram pressures in the expanding ionization fronts were estimated for younger H II regions.NSF AST 06-07500, 09-07790NASAW. M. Keck FoundationAstronom
A Lack of Resolved Near-Infrared Polarization Across the Face of M51
The galaxy M51 was observed using the Mimir instrument on the Perkins
telescope to constrain the resolved H-band (1.6 m) polarization across the
galaxy. These observations place an upper limit of on the -band
polarization across the face of M51, at 0.6 arcsecond pixel sampling. Even with
smoothing to coarser angular resolutions, to reduce polarization uncertainty,
the -band polarization remains undetected. The polarization upper limit at
-band, when combined with previous resolved optical polarimetry, rules out a
Serkowski-like polarization dependence on wavelength. Other polarization
mechanisms cannot account for the observed polarization ratio () across the face of M51.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, Accepted for publication in ApJ
Tracing the magnetic field of IRDC G028.23-00.19 using NIR polarimetry
The importance of the magnetic (B) field in the formation of infrared dark clouds (IRDCs) and massive stars is an ongoing topic of investigation. We studied the plane-of-sky B field for one IRDC, G028.23-00.19, to understand the interaction between the field and the cloud. We used near-IR background starlight polarimetry to probe the B field and performed several observational tests to assess the field importance. The polarimetric data, taken with the Mimir instrument, consisted of H-band and K-band observations, totaling 17,160 stellar measurements. We traced the plane-of-sky B-field morphology with respect to the sky-projected cloud elongation. We also found the relationship between the estimated B-field strength and gas volume density, and we computed estimates of the normalized mass-to-magnetic flux ratio. The B-field orientation with respect to the cloud did not show a preferred alignment, but it did exhibit a large-scale pattern. The plane-of-sky B-field strengths ranged from 10 to 165 μG, and the B-field strength dependence on density followed a power law with an index consistent with 2/3. The mass-to-magnetic flux ratio also increased as a function of density. The relative orientations and relationship between the B field and density imply that the B field was not dynamically important in the formation of the IRDC. The increase in mass-to-flux ratio as a function of density, though, indicates a dynamically important B field. Therefore, it is unclear whether the B field influenced the formation of G28.23. However, it is likely that the presence of the IRDC changed the local B-field morphology.We thank J. Montgomery, T. Hogge, and I. Stephens for constructive discussions on the analysis. We are grateful to R. Crutcher for permission to include his Zeeman data. This research was conducted in part using the Mimir instrument, jointly developed at Boston University and Lowell Observatory and supported by NASA, NSF, and the W.M. Keck Foundation. This research made use of the NASA/IPAC Infrared Science Archive, which is operated by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology (Caltech), under contract with NASA. This publication made use of data products from the Two Micron All Sky Survey, which was a joint project of the University of Massachusetts and the Infrared Processing and Analysis Center/Caltech, funded by NASA and NSF. This work is based in part on data obtained as part of the UKIRT Infrared Deep Sky Survey. The ATLAS-GAL project is a collaboration between the Max-PlanckGesellschaft, the European Southern Observatory (ESO), and the Universidad de Chile. It includes projects E-181.C-0885, E-078.F-9040(A), M-079.C-9501(A), M-081.C-9501(A), and Chilean data. This publication makes use of molecular line data from the Boston University-FCRAO Galactic Ring Survey (GRS). The GRS is a joint project of Boston University and Five College Radio Astronomy Observatory, funded by the National Science Foundation under grants AST-9800334, 0098562, 0100793, 0228993, and. 0507657. A.E.G. acknowledges support from FONDECYT 3150570. This work was supported under NSF grants AST 09-07790 and 14-12269 and NASA grant NNX15AE51G to Boston University. We thank the anonymous referee for valuable feedback, which improved the quality of this work. (NASA; NSF; W.M. Keck Foundation; E-181.C-0885 - Max-Planck-Gesellschaft; E-078.F-9040(A) - Max-Planck-Gesellschaft; M-079.C-9501(A) - Max-Planck-Gesellschaft; M-081.C-9501(A) - Max-Planck-Gesellschaft; E-181.C-0885 - European Southern Observatory (ESO); E-078.F-9040(A) - European Southern Observatory (ESO); M-079.C-9501(A) - European Southern Observatory (ESO); M-081.C-9501(A) - European Southern Observatory (ESO); E-181.C-0885 - Universidad de Chile; E-078.F-9040(A) - Universidad de Chile; M-079.C-9501(A) - Universidad de Chile; M-081.C-9501(A) - Universidad de Chile; AST-9800334 - National Science Foundation; 0098562 - National Science Foundation; 0100793 - National Science Foundation; 0228993 - National Science Foundation; 0507657 - National Science Foundation; 3150570 - FONDECYT; AST 09-07790 - NSF; 14-12269 - NSF; NNX15AE51G - NASA
The unusual distribution of molecular gas and star formation in Arp 140
We investigate the atomic and molecular interstellar medium and star
formation of NGC 275, the late-type spiral galaxy in Arp 140, which is
interacting with NGC 274, an early-type system. The atomic gas (HI)
observations reveal a tidal tail from NGC 275 which extends many optical radii
beyond the interacting pair. The HI morphology implies a prograde encounter
between the galaxy pair approximately 1.5 x 10**8 years ago. The Halpha
emission from NGC 275 indicates clumpy irregular star-formation, clumpiness
which is mirrored by the underlying mass distribution as traced by the Ks-band
emission. The molecular gas distribution is striking in its anti-correlation
with the {HII regions. Despite the evolved nature of NGC 275's interaction and
its barred potential, neither the molecular gas nor the star formation are
centrally concentrated. We suggest that this structure results from stochastic
star formation leading to preferential consumption of the gas in certain
regions of the galaxy. In contrast to the often assumed picture of interacting
galaxies, NGC 275, which appears to be close to merger, does not display
enhanced or centrally concentrated star formation. If the eventual merger is to
lead to a significant burst of star formation it must be preceded by a
significant conversion of atomic to molecular gas as at the current rate of
star formation all the molecular gas will be exhausted by the time the merger
is complete.Comment: 13 paper, accepted my Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical
Societ
Thermal Conductivity of Thermoelectric Si\u3csub\u3e0.8\u3c/sub\u3e‐Ge\u3csub\u3e0.2\u3c/sub\u3e Alloys
The thermal conductivity of heavily doped, n-type Si-Ge alloys has been studied from 300 to 1200 K. The scattering rate of several phonon scattering mechanisms has been calculated, including intrinsic scattering, mass defect and distortion scattering, phonon-electron scattering, and scattering by inclusions. These rates were then used to calculate the lattice thermal conductivity. The electronic component of the thermal conductivity was calculated from the calculated Lorenz ratio and measured values of the electrical conductivity. The total thermal conductivity was then compared to measured values for a specimen studied by Vining et al
Enhanced Spontaneous Emission Into The Mode Of A Cavity QED System
We study the light generated by spontaneous emission into a mode of a cavity
QED system under weak excitation of the orthogonally polarized mode. Operating
in the intermediate regime of cavity QED with comparable coherent and
decoherent coupling constants, we find an enhancement of the emission into the
undriven cavity mode by more than a factor of 18.5 over that expected by the
solid angle subtended by the mode. A model that incorporates three atomic
levels and two polarization modes quantitatively explains the observations.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures, to appear in May 2007 Optics Letter
Testing Galactic Magnetic Field Models using Near-Infrared Polarimetry
This work combines new observations of NIR starlight linear polarimetry with
previously simulated observations in order to constrain dynamo models of the
Galactic magnetic field. Polarimetric observations were obtained with the Mimir
instrument on the Perkins Telescope in Flagstaff, AZ, along a line of constant
Galactic longitude (\ell = 150\circ) with 17 pointings of the 10' \times 10'
field of view between -75\circ < b < 10\circ, with more frequent pointings
towards the Galactic midplane. A total of 10,962 stars were photometrically
measured and 1,116 had usable polarizations. The observed distribution of
polarization position angles with Galactic latitude and the cumulative
distribution function of the measured polarizations are compared to predicted
values. While the predictions lack the effects of turbulence and are therefore
idealized, this comparison allows significant rejection of A0-type magnetic
field models. S0 and disk-even halo-odd magnetic field geometries are also
rejected by the observations, but at lower significance. New predictions of
spiral-type, axisymmetric magnetic fields, when combined with these new NIR
observations, constrain the Galactic magnetic field spiral pitch angle to
-6\circ \pm 2\circ.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, Accepted for publication in Ap
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